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Home » News » Editor Favorites

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Thai prime minister declares emergency

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  • Anti-government protesters cheer during a speech by one of their leaders on the grounds of the prime minister's office which they have been occupying for nearly a week Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2008 in Bangkok, Thailand. Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej declared a state of emergency Tuesday, calling it the "softest means available" for restoring order after overnight clashes between government opponents and supporters left one person dead and 43 injured. (AP Photo/Ed Wray)

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By Jocelyn Gecker ASSOCIATED PRESS

UPDATED:

BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) – Thailand's prime minister declared a state of emergency in the capital Bangkok on Tuesday after a week of political tension exploded into violent street clashes between supporters and opponents of the government that left one person dead.

Under sweeping powers that give the military the right to restore order, authorities can suspend certain civil liberties, ban all public gatherings of more than five people and bar the media from reporting news that "causes panic."

The military, which has staged 18 coups since the country became a constitutional monarchy in 1932, said the army did not want to step into the crisis but if it had to, it would not use force against the public.

Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej was confronted with another threat Tuesday when the Election Commission recommended his People's Power Party be disbanded for electoral fraud during December elections. Samak and other top party leaders would be banned from politics for five years if the ruling is upheld by judicial authorities, though members could form a new party and retain power by winning new elections.

Samak gave no timeframe for how long the emergency decree would stay in effect but said it would be over "moderately quickly."

"I did it to solve the problems of the country," Samak said in a televised news conference at a military headquarters in Bangkok. "I had no other choice. The softest means available was an emergency decree to end the situation using the law."

The overnight violence heightened a national crisis that started a week ago when thousands of opponents of Samak occupied the grounds of his office and refused to move until he resigned.

The right-wing People's Alliance for Democracy accuses Samak of being too close to ex-Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra and of trying to change the constitution to help him avoid prosecution on corruption charges.

Thaksin was ousted in a 2006 coup and recently fled to Britain to escape an array of corruption charges. The same group organized the massive anti-Thaksin demonstrations in 2006 that helped spark the bloodless coup.

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