By DPA,
Bangkok : The battle between the Thai government and supporters of coup-ousted former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra has moved off the streets and into the courts, officials said Thursday.
A week after Thai troops and armoured vehicles broke up a two-month demonstration by Thaksin supporters in the heart of Bangkok, the government has initiated a multi-pronged legal offensive against the former premier and his backers.
“In fact, it’s a good sign to have legal battles instead of street battles,” government spokesman Panithan Wattanayankorn said Thursday. “It shows the system is functioning again.”
Thai police were expected to formally seek the help of Interpol next week to arrest and extradite Thaksin to face a charge of terrorism for his alleged role in financing and organising the protests. Unrest surrounding the demonstrations resulted in 88 deaths and 1,885 injuries.
Thaksin’s lawyers filed an appeal Wednesday, seeking to revoke an arrest warrant issued against him on terrorism charges the day before.
In his first published reaction to the terrorism charge, Thaksin said in an interview with the Australian public broadcaster ABC Thursday that he did not bankroll the so-called red-shirt rebellion and Interpol should ignore the warrant for his arrest.
“We never, we never, engage in violence,” Thaksin said. “This (charge) is clearly politically motivated, and there is no ground. …Interpol always found out that the information that the Thai government give is unreliable and is politically motivated.”
Thaksin denied that protesters had set the fires that gutted several major buildings in Bangkok May 19, saying they did not have the technical capabilities to do so.
Thaksin was removed from office in 2006 by a bloodless army coup and jumped bail after he was charged and later convicted of abuse of power by a Thai court. He is currently living in self-imposed exile in the tiny European country of Montenegro.
Panithan admitted the government of Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva faces an uphill battle in restoring public confidence after the violence in Bangkok.
He said an independent panel would be convened to investigate the upheaval.
In addition, Panithan said legal cases were due to be submitted next month against anti-Thaksin “yellow shirt” protesters who closed down Bangkok’s two international airports in late 2008.
Failure to prosecute those protesters, who support Abhisit’s government, was one of the main criticisms made by the pro-Thaksin red shirts, who argued that a double standard was being applied.
Panithan said the government was working hard to counter rumours that have proliferated in the bitterness that has followed the Bangkok street battles.
He said reports that nine bodies had been found last week in the basement of the gutted Central World shopping centre were false.
The spokesman also denied rumours that Arisman Phongruangrong, a key leader of the anti-government protest who disappeared last week, had been killed by security forces.
“Arisman is still at large,” Panithan said. “We can’t confirm his whereabouts. We are worried about his safety too. If something happened to him, then the blame would come to us.”