Insight: How Thaksin's meddling sparked a new Thai crisis for PM sister | Reuters
Andrew R.C. Marshall and Jason Szep, BANGKOK
(Reuters) -
Yingluck Shinawatra's journey from political nobody to prime minister
was breathtakingly swift. Her premiership's descent into crisis has been
just as rapid.
A political neophyte when she
took office in 2011, the 46-year-old former business executive surprised
many observers by steadying Thailand after years of often bloody
political unrest.
Then she leaned over and pushed a button marked "SELF-DESTRUCT".
Behind
Thailand's lurch into its worst crisis in years was a disastrous
intervention by Yingluck's billionaire brother Thaksin, who was deposed
in a 2006 military coup and now lives abroad to escape a corruption
conviction.
Thaksin's meddling
turned a bill that would have freed ordinary Thais charged with
protest-related crimes into a controversial wider amnesty for
politicians such as himself, say senior members of Yingluck's ruling
Puea Thai Party.
The passing of the
bill last November sparked street protests and unrest that have killed
10 people, wounded hundreds and dramatically changed Yingluck's
political fortunes.
A Reuters
reconstruction, based on interviews with senior Puea Thai members and
its "red shirt" allies, reveals how Thaksin's intervention shattered two
years of relative calm.
It also
highlights how quickly political missteps can spiral into violence in
Thailand, a warning sign ahead of a general election on Sunday that
protesters have vowed to disrupt.
On
one side is Thaksin and his younger sister Yingluck. Thaksin redrew the
political map by courting rural voters in the north and northeast to
gain an unbeatable electoral mandate that he then used to advance the
interests of major companies, including his own. Thaksin-backed parties
have convincingly won every general election since 2001.
On
the other are the traditional Bangkok elites threatened by his meteoric
rise, mainly the military, palace and bureaucracy, who see Thaksin as
corrupt and his sister as his proxy.
"LET'S PUSH THIS THROUGH"
Thaksin
once famously described Yingluck as a "clone" who could make decisions
on his behalf. Her party's election slogan was "Thaksin thinks, Puea
Thai acts".
But after her
landslide victory in July 2011, Thailand's first female prime minister
often set her own agenda, say analysts. She refused to reshuffle her
Cabinet on Thaksin's demand, and deployed her formidable charm to soothe
relations with her divisive brother's opponents in the establishment,
particularly the military that had removed him from office.
The
previous six years of unrest, which culminated in a military crackdown
on Thaksin's red-shirted supporters that killed 91 people in 2010, began
to fade.
But the self-exiled Thaksin wanted to come home, and would not take no for an answer.
The
vehicle for his return would be a draft bill that sailed through the
Puea Thai-majority parliament last August. It would grant amnesties to
protesters - but not leaders - charged and jailed in waves of unrest
between 2006 and 2011.
Before the
bill's second reading, Thaksin's aides told Puea Thai MPs that the
former prime minister wanted to radically expand it to absolve leaders
on both sides, say senior Puea Thai members.
A
parliamentary scrutiny committee, also dominated by Puea Thai and its
coalition allies, passed a revised draft of the bill on October 18.
The
amnesty now extended to murder charges laid against former Democrat
Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva and his deputy, Suthep Thaugsuban, for
ordering the 2010 crackdown. Abhisit led an unelected government for
nearly three years after a pro-Thaksin administration was removed from
office by the courts in 2008.
It
also quashed hundreds of corruption cases and nullified the two-year
jail sentence against Thaksin, allowing the return of $1.4 billion of
his seized wealth - and a ticket back to Thailand.
Yingluck
had reservations about the blanket amnesty, particularly about dropping
the charges against Abhisit and Suthep, said her chief of staff
Suranand Vejjajiva. "But in the end the MPs agreed, 'Let's push this
through'," he said.
GROWING CRISIS
The
revised bill electrified Thaksin's opponents and split his supporters.
Leaders of the United Front for Democracy Against Dictatorship (UDD), a
pro-government red shirt group, soon made public their anger with the
party, seeing the new bill's forgiveness of Abhisit and Suthep as a
denial of justice for slain protesters. At the same time, small protests
by Thaksin's opponents began gathering steam.
More
than half of Puea Thai MPs disagreed with the bill, but few dared to
speak up, said a senior Puea Thai MP who spoke on condition of
anonymity. "The way they put it, if you want to help Thaksin, support
the bill. If you don't support the bill, you don't want to help
Thaksin."
But Suranand denied the MPs were coerced. "No one put a gun to their head and said, 'You have to vote'," he said.
Even
so, many Puea Thai insiders feared Thaksin and his sister were blind to
the growing crisis, underestimating the ability of his enemies to
exploit public anger against the bill, said the senior party member.
At
4 a.m. on November 1, a buzzer rang through the hall of Thailand's
House of Representatives. After 19 hours and the abstention of the
Democrats, bleary-eyed MPs unanimously passed the amnesty bill.
Protests
against the bill, now headed for the senate, dramatically picked up. On
Monday November 4, thousands of largely middle class Bangkokians
gathered sporting Thai flag paraphernalia and whistles. Leading the pack
was Suthep.
SNOWBALL EFFECT
Faced
with public outrage, Yingluck quickly ordered the bill to be pulled
from the Senate. Her advisors now spin this as proof that she listens to
the public and admits her mistakes, and shift the blame for the bill
onto Puea Thai and its MPs.
"As a
political party, we didn't anticipate the very negative feedback from
the public," Noppadon Pattama, a Puea Thai strategist who advises both
Thaksin and Yingluck, told Reuters.
The
aborted bill provided Yingluck's long-dormant enemies with the
ammunition they needed. On November 12, Suthep resigned from parliament
along with eight other Democrat MPs. The protests began their evolution
into an uprising against, first, the "Thaksin regime", and then
Thailand's system of electoral democracy itself.
"Once
they were participating in the rallies against Thaksin, people who were
against the bill became people against the system," the Puea Thai MP
told Reuters. "They got their critical mass and snowball effect."
Jatuporn
Prompan, a UDD leader and senior Puea Thai member, said he could see
that Suthep and other establishment figures had long been planning a
fresh uprising. He warned party leaders that the amnesty bill was just
the trigger they needed.
"Suthep
Thaugsuban and his team took two years to prepare for this to happen,"
Jatuporn Prompan, a leader of the UDD and senior Puea Thai member, told
Reuters. "He was preparing with the support of a network of elite
bureaucrats."
The protests
unleashed by the aborted bill have added to a perfect storm of crisis
for Yingluck, who has been a caretaker prime minister - with limited
powers - since dissolving parliament on December 9 to call a snap
election.
Thailand's
anti-corruption commission has launched an impeachment investigation
into her role as head of a wasteful and opaque rice-pledging scheme.
Farmers waiting payment under the multi-billion-dollar scheme are
blocking provincial highways in protest.
Thousands
of protesters still occupy major intersections in an attempt to "shut
down" Bangkok. The capital is braced for violence during Sunday's
election, which the Democrat Party is boycotting.
Protesters
want the election postponed until parliament is replaced by an
unelected "people's council" to reform Thai politics. They also demand
Yingluck's resignation and the exile of the entire Shinawatra clan.
Yingluck refuses to go. Even today, said Suranand, she broadly stands by the amnesty bill that might yet destroy her.
"She
sees it as: If you can forgive everyone, and everyone accepts that
forgiveness, then you can reset everything and move on," he said. "Of
course, it didn't turn out that way."
(Additional reporting by Aubrey Belford and Amy Sawitta Lefevre; Editing by Alex Richardson)
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