|
Thaksin
returns to Thailand amid cheers and tears
Foreign Desk Report
BANGKOK—Ousted Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra made an emotional
return from exile on Thursday, preaching reconciliation and forgiveness
in a country still polarized by his five years in elected office.
“We can certainly have various opinions on various things, but we shall
not be divided,” the former telecoms tycoon told a packed news
conference after arriving from Hong Kong. “It will be best for all of us
to reduce our ego, and our prejudice,” he said.
However, few Thais believe — or want to believe — the 58-year-old’s
mantra that he is returning only to clear himself of corruption charges
and to spend quality time with the family after 18 months of exile
enforced by a September 2006 coup. The cheers and tears from the
thousands who greeted him at Bangkok’s new airport suggest the only
elected Thai prime minister to complete a full term in office will not
be allowed to stay out of the political fray for long — even if he
wanted to.
“I love him so much,” said 65-year-old Wilai Scott, who is married to a
foreigner. “I want Thaksin to be PM again.” The big question is whether
he does indeed take a back seat, or whether he uses allies swept to
power in a December election to go after the generals and the royalist
elite who ousted him.
Already the People’s Alliance for Democracy, which led the protest
marches against Thaksin that culminated in the coup, has warned Thaksin
not to use political clout to sway the corruption cases against him and
his wife. “If we find they are trying to intervene in the judicial
process directly or indirectly, we will not sit idly by,” spokesman
Suriyasai Katasila told reporters.
What seems certain is that the long-term battle for Thailand’s future is
far from over. “He will attract a lot of support from his fans and he
will attract a lot of hostility from those who don’t see his presence in
Thailand as a benefit,” said Christopher Bruton, director of Dataconsult.
“We are going to see opposing groups and that alone is a highly
disruptive factor,” he said.
Within minutes of arriving, Thaksin surrendered himself to police, then,
with tears in his eyes, left the terminal to kneel and place his
forehead on the ground, his palms clasped together in a gesture of
traditional respect for his motherland.
Thousands of supporters waving roses and “We love Thaksin” banners
cheered their hero, who was then whisked away in a motorcade of
limousines to the Supreme Court, where he was granted 8 million baht
($268,500) bail.Thaksin, accused of presiding over rampant corruption
and disrespecting revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej, protested his
innocence and insisted his political career was over.
“I’ll just voice concerns as a former prime minister, if I were to have
any,” he told reporters on the plane, a celebratory glass of champagne
in his hands.
Bangkok’s main stock index closed up 1.2 percent in thin trade as
investors tried to assess the impact of his return. His every word is
likely to come under intense scrutiny in coming weeks to divine his real
intentions.
Signs of revenge would alarm investors worried about a repeat of the
political confrontation that brought Thailand’s government and capital
city to a standstill for months in late 2005 and much of 2006.
“The next question here is about political stability, whether the man
can live up to his promises,” said Saengtham Jaranachaikul, a senior
analyst at Thanachart Securities. “If he does the opposite, then it
might stir up those who dislike him to come out on the streets again,”
he said.
|