Thai Culture: What the stars says & the latest on “Taksin Relaxes and Waits”

Blog Note: Taksin, as the Star report say, is relaxing and waiting.

Well that is partially correct-as the Pheu Thai party is waiting for direction from Taksin-between Mingkwan, a Thai politician with many qualities similar to Taksin and Yingluck, Taksin’s sister.

The latest un-confirmed report is that Taksin has agreed to allowing Mingkwan to take be the contender of the next Thai prime minister and for his sister, Yingluck, to be the Pheu Thai party head.

There continues to be conflicting reports if Mingkwan will take the prime minister position only to be used in the opposition censure debate-and for Yingluck to be the real contender for the Thai prime minister position.

Following on from this morning  Thai Intel’s report on the Pheu Thai Party with the article titled “Creative Wind of Change”see here, Taksin has proved yet again how creative he could be-with the potential first women Thai prime minister.

The following is from the Toronto Star

Tracey Tyler Legal Affairs Reporter

Life in self-imposed exile is pleasantly laid back and far from lonely, says Thaksin Shinawatra, Thailand’s deposed prime minister, who remains a hero to many in that country’s “Red Shirt” movement.

The 61-year-old former leader has kept a low profile since being ousted in a military coup Sept. 19, 2006, but spoke to the Toronto Star in an exclusive interview from his Mideast exile.

“My life is really relaxed,” he said Thursday. “I have lots of people coming to see me.”

On Thursday, that included his Canadian lawyer, Bob Amsterdam, as well as a delegation from Thailand, which remains a country of deep political divisions heading into an election year.

It endured its worst violence in recent memory last spring when Thaksin’s red-shirted supporters poured into the streets of Bangkok to demand elections and protest the government of Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva and stayed there for almost two months.

Clashes with the Thai military left 91 dead and an estimated 1,800 wounded and led to eight months of emergency rule.

Thaksin, meanwhile, has been living a peripatetic life since 2008, when he failed to return to Thailand from the Beijing Olympics, after a Thai court had convicted him on corruption charges and sentenced him in absentia to two years in jail.

Reports from Bangkok last week said a group of Pheu Thai party members were travelling to meet with Thaksin and discuss who should assume the opposition party’s leadership.

Thaksin, a former billionaire businessman, distanced himself Thursday from direct involvement in any political movement.

He insisted he is not advising members of the United Front for Democracy Against Dictatorship (UDD), the formal name for the Red Shirts, who enjoy wide support among Thailand’s rural poor and working class.

“I don’t know them,” he said.

But Thaksin also said Abhisit’s conservative coalition government, largely supported by Thailand’s wealthier urban population, must sit down with UDD leaders to discuss their concerns.

The British-born Abhisit promised a reconciliation process last May.

“Reconciliation would mean that you have to talk,” Thaksin said. “And find a solution to bring democracy back. Reconciliation does not mean you get rid of leaders and bring their followers to jail.”

The UDD, meanwhile, is putting the finishing touches on a complaint it plans to file this month with the International Criminal Court, urging that the Thai government be indicted for crimes against humanity in connection with last spring’s deadly demonstrations.

Thaksin is not among the complainants but is contributing to the UDD’s legal expenses, Amsterdam said Thursday.

Thaksin’s own human rights record, meanwhile, has been called into question by Amnesty International.

The agency has asked for independent investigations into the deaths of more than 80 people killed when his security forces tried to suppress suspected insurgents in southern Thailand in 2004, and another 2,500 killed in a crackdown on suspected drug traffickers.

But his popularity remains high in the countryside because of policies that included micro-lending programs, erasing farmers’ debts and a form of universal health care.

“Their life has been changed. Their happiness has been taken away,” Thaksin, who won two elections, said Thursday. “They just want me back.”

His convictions and jail sentence were “really, really politically motivated” by the “military junta government” and his opponents, Thaksin added.

“They really planned to lock me out of Thailand and don’t want me to go back.”

The challenge for any leader is bridging the enormous economic and political gulf between rural Thais and the Bangkok elite, said Peter Vandergeest, who teaches at York University’s Centre for Asian Research.

Thaksin agrees.

“Thais are really peaceful,” he said. “They have to have a solution so that the people of Thailand can live together and no division.”