Thai poll re-runs pass peacefully

Source:AFP Published: 2014-3-3 0:28:02

A police official (left) keeps a watch as a Thai voter (center) casts his vote into the ballot box at the Taa Ta Kho village polling station as part of a re-run of general elections in the village in Petchaburi province, south of Bangkok on Sunday. Photo: AFP

A police official (left) keeps a watch as a Thai voter (center) casts his vote into the ballot box at the Taa Ta Kho village polling station as part of a re-run of general elections in the village in Petchaburi province, south of Bangkok on Sunday. Photo: AFP



Thailand's first poll re-runs passed peacefully Sunday following a widely disrupted general election, as pro-government "Red Shirts" stepped up rallies in support of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra's battered administration.

The February 2 election failed to ease a four-month political crisis when protesters seeking to topple Yingluck's government caused the closure of around 10 percent of polling stations, many in opposition strongholds.

The Election Commission said results cannot be announced until polls have been held in all constituencies, setting a late-April deadline for their completion.

Yingluck can only remain prime minister in a caretaker role until then with limited power over policy, further eroding her authority as she handles ongoing street protests and a series of legal challenges against her administration.

Election Commissioner Somchai Srisutthiyakorn said around 120,000 people were registered to vote Sunday across more than 100 constituencies in five provinces.

He said the re-runs, the first attempted since February 2, had been held "peacefully ... without any problems."

But only a trickle of voters were seen at several polling stations in Phetchaburi, an opposition heartland around 160 kilometers south of Bangkok, according to an AFP reporter.

"I was disappointed that I had the right to vote on February 2 but couldn't," Sangwan Yuusuk, 57, said at a station.

Under election law, 95 percent of the 500 seats in the lower house of parliament must be filled to enable the appointment of a new government.

On its website the Election Commission said senators will be elected on March 30.

The main opposition Democrat party, which boycotted the general election, last month lost a legal bid to nullify the poll.

In addition to the protests, Yingluck faces a series of legal complaints against her government, including charges of negligence over a troubled rice subsidy scheme which could see her removed from office.

Pro-government Red Shirts have ramped up their rallies and rhetoric in support of Yingluck and her billionaire brother Thaksin - a former prime minister in exile to avoid jail for a corruption conviction.

Television footage Sunday showed thousands of people grouping in a car park in Khon Kaen - a Red Shirt stronghold in the country's northeast - for an overnight rally, wearing the ubiquitous red and waving flags.

It follows a similar rally on Saturday in the northeast, which together with the rural north has returned Shinawatra-allied governments to power in every election for more than a decade. They say their votes are a political reward for policies that have funneled state money to their hard-scrabble regions after years of neglect.

Opponents describe the same policies as a form of vote-buying.

 AFP



Posted in: Asia-Pacific

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