Controversial legislation that will grant an amnesty for thugs,
politicians, protesters and military personnel caught up in the anti-government
demonstrations of recent years has been passed by the Thai parliament.
The bill will also allow for the return home of former Prime Minister
Thaksin Shinawatra
The parliament passed
a second and third reading of the bill for a blanket amnesty
early Friday with opposition groups, in particular the families of
people killed in the riots, holding an all night vigil organized by the
Democrat Party.
Thaksin has lived in exile since he
was ousted by the military in a 2006 coup, launched after he and his family made
nearly US$2.0 billion through the
sale of telecommunications company Shin Corp to Temasek Holdings in
Singapore. This also sparked the deadly yellow-shirt revolts and confrontation
with Thaksin-backed red shirts.
His sister and current Prime
Minister, Yingluck Shinawatra, has been a primary driver behind the bill and
the threat of its passage had prompted accusations that political expediency
was winning out over justice for those killed or injured in violent political
confrontations.
More than 90 people were killed in
anti-government riots in 2010 when tens of thousands of people camped in the
heart of the city to try to force then Prime Minister Abhisit
Vejjajiva to call early elections.
Prosecutors had just this week threatened
to charge Abhisit and his former Deputy Prime Minister Suthep
Thaugsuban with “causing others to commit murders and attempted murders”
through orders they issued to end the nine-week occupation of downtown Bangkok.
Both men were opposed to the amnesty
and said they were prepared to go to court to clear their names.
A court has found that Thai soldiers
were responsible for the deaths of six protesters but with passage of the
amnesty both former leaders should now be protected from prosecution – whether
they like it or not.
The amnesty bill has also fed accusations
that Thaksin is using his sister as a proxy to continue running his political
and business empire from abroad, a charge her government and Pheu Thai Party
reject, as opposed to returning home where he faces a two-year jail
term for corruption.
The legislation offers an amnesty for
all people involved in political protests from January 1, 2004 to August 8,
2013. An exception, perhaps not surprisingly, is for those charged under
Section 112 of the Thai Criminal Code, also known as the lese majeste law.By Luke
Hunt ‘Asia Beat’
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