Thai PM repeats calls for calm ahead of protesters' deadline
Thailand’s government and the country’s
pro-democracy movement appeared no closer to resolving their differences
Saturday, as the protesters' evening deadline for Prime Minister Prayuth
Chan-ocha to step down approached.
Prayuth’s office issued a statement repeating his
plea to resolve differences through Parliament, which will discuss the
political situation in a special session starting Monday.
“Although the ongoing political situation comprises
many opposing views among different groups, we should rather take this as an
opportunity for Thais to consult each other on what is best for the nation,”
said the statement.
Prayuth this past week issued a call to allow
Parliament to seek a solution to the crisis, and in a gesture to appease the
protesters, revoked a state of emergency for Bangkok he had imposed a week
earlier that made protest rallies illegal.
“If all parties are committed to exercise full
restraint and flexibility, the circumstances would be more conducive to
de-escalating the current tense political conflict and reaching an outcome that
is acceptable to all stakeholders,” said Saturday’s statement, quoting
government spokesperson Anucha Burapachaisri.
The protesters, however, said they were sticking to
a deadline of 10 p.m. Saturday for Prayuth to meet their demands that he
resign, and that their arrested comrades be released from jail.
One of the protest leaders, Jatupat “Pai Dao Din”
Boonpattararaksa, told a crowd outside Bangkok Remand Prison that protesters
should gather there Saturday and consider their next step as they wait for a
response from Prayuth.
Protesters had rallied outside the prison on Friday
to press for their comrades’ release. They welcomed the release of Jatupat, who
called for seven others still imprisoned to be freed.
However, three prominent protest leaders were denied
release on bail Saturday morning.
In addition to calling for Prayuth's resignation,
the protesters’ core demands also include a more democratic constitution and
reforms to the monarchy.
The protesters charge that Prayuth, who as then-army
commander led a 2014 coup, was returned to power unfairly in last year’s
general election because laws had been changed to favor a pro-military party.
The protesters also say that a constitution written and passed under military
rule is undemocratic.
The implicit criticism of the monarchy, which
protesters believe wields too much power, has irked conservative Thais because
it traditionally has been treated as sacrosanct and a pillar of national
identity.
There is concern that the situation may become more
volatile, because in the past week there has been a mobilization of forces who
claim to be defenders of the monarchy.
Royalists held rallies in several cities, in many
cases led by local civil servants. On Wednesday, a small counter-protest held
in Bangkok turned violent when a few attendees attacked anti-government
students.
King Maha Vajiralongkorn made a rare appearance
Friday night as he and Queen Suthida and other members of the royal family
walked through a crowd of ardent royalists who had gathered on a street to
cheer him as he passed by.
The king, in an unusually informal manner, was seen
on a widely circulated video giving thanks to an onlooker who earlier in the
week had held up a sign supporting the monarchy in the midst of anti-government
supporters. The video showed the queen pointing out the man to the king.
Vajiralongkorn also spoke briefly with Suwit
Thongprasert, a royalist activist who had been part of a group whose violent
protests in 2014 put pressure on an elected government that helped trigger the
coup led by Prayuth. Suwit was a Buddhist monk known as Buddha Issara when he
was a leader of the right-wing People’s Democratic Reform Committee during the
2014 protests.



