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Luangpu Puttha Issara among the protesters in Bangkok today

Bangkok Protesters Call for Yingluck to Quit or Thailand's Stock Exchange Will Be Stopped

Monday, January 13, 2014
PHUKET: Protesters in Bangkok have shut down Thailand's capital and are now threatening to halt the Stock Exchange of Thailand from Wednesday unless Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra resigns.

The protesters - not from a group under the leadership of Suthep Thaugsuban - said they would also aim to close the aerial traffic controls over Bangkok, one of the world's busiest capitals.

The stock exchange was continuing to trade today but many government offices and schools have either closed in advance of the protest or opted to close when confronted by demonstrators this morning.

Prime Minister Yingluck and her brother Thaksin are accused of taking corruption and nepotism to new levels in Thailand and the protesters are seeking to have the Shinawatras barred from Thai politics.

Thaksin, a former PM and now a fugitive overseas, will face a two-year jail term if he returns to Thailand.

An attempt to grant him and others an amnesty under a new law is what led in November to street protests culminating in today's massive central Bangkok rally.

Suthep told a rally on Sunday that he refused to negotiate or compromise. ''The only thing that we the people want is to get rid of [the] Thaksin regime from Thailand,'' Suthep said.

''We'll either win or lose in this battle. There's no draw.'' A well-known monk, Luangpu Puttha Issara, was among the crowd at today's Bangkok protest.

On Phuket, a smaller rally was underway with hundreds of protesters streaming in to the Phuket Provincial Hall grounds in Phuket City today to ask government administrative workers to down tools and join them.

Comments

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now i have heard it all ...a monk joining protesters? ...politics is not a monks business ....

Posted by chris on January 13, 2014 12:32

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Forget Thailand. Holidays are now much cheaper in Cambodia.

Posted by Ryk on January 13, 2014 14:58

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@chris, I suppose you should also write to the Vatican and protest about catholic priests protesting in many South American and African nations.

Posted by Laurie Howells on January 13, 2014 16:26

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@Laurie Howells!
"Very' Correct!

Posted by Mr. K on January 13, 2014 18:17

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@laurie.... i would expect that of the catholic church , the largest land holders on the planet ...catholics and monks have nothing fundamentally in common ...

Posted by chris on January 13, 2014 18:48

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@chris... I fail to see what land ownership has to do with the protection of citizens rights, the elimination of corruption etc. It is a stand against a corrupt, repressive regime.

Posted by Laurie Howells on January 13, 2014 20:07

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@laurie ....the catholic church in itself is a corrupt and repressive regime ...the second world war ring a bell ? my point is this , a real monk, living in the true faith, would not be affected by any political party ..good or bad ...

Posted by chris on January 13, 2014 20:33

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Agree Chris

Posted by Sean on January 13, 2014 20:41

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Every politician voted FOR the Amnesty bill 310-0. Now the opposition have the audacity to protest against something they voted for.
Then they want to appoint people in charge without a Vote. So maybe I will see if I can run the country because I don't need to be voted in.

Posted by Tbs on January 15, 2014 07:22

Editor Comment:

Wikipedia: ''The House of Representatives has 500 Members: 375 Members are democratically elected through single constituency elections, while the other 125 are appointed accordingly through party-list proportional representation.'' BBC: ''The lower house backed the bill, despite an opposition boycott. But as protests gathered strength, the governing party withdrew its support from the bill and all 141 senators present voted against it.'' You seem incapable of ever checking the facts, Tbs.

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@chris and Sean. I agree, a monk should not be affiliated with any political party, but, I did not see anything in this article to say he is. I do not know what the Monk is thinking, but just maybe he is thinking more of the welfare of Thais than any particular political party, same as the priests I mentioned before. Chris, why do you find it hard to stay with this story, instead you go off on a tangent and get onto the Catholic church being corrupt, can we stick to this story, not something else that is rattling around in your head.

Posted by Laurie Howells on January 15, 2014 09:22


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