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By
Amir Shah and Fisnik Abrashi
Thai airports to reopen
On hearing the court’s decision, a cheer rose from
thousands of members of the People’s Alliance for
Democracy occupying the international airport.
Thailand's prime minister
was ousted Tuesday after weeks of protests closed the
capital's airports, stranding 300,000 travelers.
Protesters promised to lift their siege, and
international flights were expected to resume Friday.
The government of Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat was
doomed when the nation's Constitutional Court dissolved
Thailand's top three ruling parties for electoral fraud
in the 2007 vote that brought them to power. Somchai was
banned from politics for five years.
Somchai did not formally resign, as the protesters had
de-manded for months, but accepted the ruling.
"It is not a problem. I was not working for myself. Now
I will be a full-time citizen," he told reporters in
Chiang Mai, the northern city where his paralyzed
administration has been forced to govern since last
Wednesday.
Protest leaders said the airport seizures would end
today.
With the waning of the political crisis, the official in
charge of Thailand's airports said Suvar-nabhumi
international airport will resume operations on Friday.
"Please have confidence in us," said Vudhibhandhu
Vichaira-tana, the chairman of the Airports of Thailand.
He called the flights a birthday gift for Thailand's
revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej, who turns 81 on Dec. 5.
The airport reopened to cargo flights Tuesday.
Officials had earlier said the airport would not reopen
for commercial flights before Dec. 15, but Vudhibhandhu
said he brought forward the date because an inspection
revealed the airport had suffered no damage and could
become operational more quickly. .
Somchai
had become increasingly isolated in recent weeks.
After Tuesday's court decision, government spokesman
Nattawut Saikau said the six-party governing coalition
would step down.
Despite the appearance of a smooth political transition,
the ruling is expected to widen the dangerous rift in
Thai society that many fear could lead to more violence
between pro- and anti-government groups.
Late Monday, an explosive device fired from an elevated
highway fell among hundreds of protesters inside Don
Muang airport, killing one person and wounding 22. The
death raised to seven the number of people killed in
bomb attacks, clashes with police and street battles
between government opponents and supporters.
On hearing the court's decision, a cheer rose from
thousands of members of the People's Alli-ance for
Democracy occupying the international airport.
"My heart is happy. My friends are very happy," said
Pailin Jampapong, a 41-year-old Bang-kok housekeeper
choking back tears as she jumped up and down.
"This is a blow for corruption," said Nong Sugrawut, a
55-year-old businessman at Suvarnabhu-mi. Somchai had
become increasingly isolated in recent weeks. Neither
the army, a key player in Thai politics, nor the
country's much revered king offered firm backing.
But hundreds of his supporters gathered outside the
court, saying the swiftness of the ruling – which came
just an hour after closing arguments ended – appeared
predetermined. At one point they cut off the power
supply to the court, but electricity was restored with
diesel generators.
"The court is not qualified to make this ruling. They
are nothing more than apologists for the alliance, who
are ruining the country," an activist shouted through a
megaphone outside the court.
Somchai's People's Power Party, the Machima Thipatai
party and the Chart Thai party were found guilty of
committing fraud in the December 2007 elections that
brought the coalition to power.
"Dishonest political parties undermine Thailand's
democratic system," said Court President Chat Chalavorn.
The ruling sends Somchai and 59 executives of the three
parties into political exile and bars them from politics
for five years. Of the 59, 24 are lawmakers who will
also have to abandon their parliamentary seats.
But lawmakers of the three dissolved parties who escaped
the ban can join other parties, try to cobble together a
new coalition and then choose a new prime minister.
Until then, Deputy Prime Minister Chaowarat Chandeer-akul
will become the caretaker prime minister, said Suparak
Nakboonnam, a government spokeswoman. She said
parliament will have to pick a new prime minister within
30 days.
The protesters accuse Somchai of being a proxy of ousted
Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, the alliance's
original target. Thak-sin, who is Somchai's brother-in-law,
was deposed in a 2006 military coup and has fled the
country to escape corruption charges.
Alliance supporters are largely middle-class citizens
who say Thailand's electoral system is susceptible to
vote-buying and argue that the rural majority – the
Thaksin camp's political base – is not sophisticated
enough to cast ballots responsibly.
They have proposed discarding direct elections in favor
of appointing most legislators, fostering resentment
among rural voters.
The protest leaders have been charged with several
criminal offenses, but are out on bail, and it is not
known when they will be tried. |||
Ambika Ahuja is an
Associated Press Writer. Associated Press reporters
Jocelyn Gecker, Vijay Joshi and Mick Elmore contributed
to this article. .
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