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Thai anti-government protesters celebrate

Prime minister ousted; group to end occupation of two airports

Image: Anti-goverment protesters celebrate in Bangkok
Ed Wray / AP
An anti-goverment protester at Suvarnabhumi Airport, Bangkok, holds a portrait of the Thai king and queen on Tuesday as others celebrate the news that Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat's ruling People's Power Party must disband.
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An anti-government protester cries as she holds a portrait of Thai king and Queen during a rally at Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi international airport after Thai court orders PM Somchai's ruling party to be disbanded
  Thai protests subside
Thailand’s political crisis enters a new phase after a court orders the government to disband and protestors abandon airports in Bangkok’s they had been occupying.

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updated 6:34 p.m. ET Dec. 2, 2008

BANGKOK, Thailand - Anti-government demonstrators in Thailand declared victory Tuesday and said they will end their occupation of the country's two main airports after a court decision forced the country's prime minister from office.

While an estimated 300,000 travelers stranded by last week's airport takeovers breathed a bit easier, the question of who will hold power in a democratic Thailand remained unanswered.

The protesters — who seek to eliminate the one-person, one-vote system — left open the possibility of more unrest, saying they will return to the streets if political change does not occur. At least six people have been killed and scores injured in clashes in recent months.

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Also unclear was the extent of damage the weeklong airport blockade inflicted on the country's economy, which relies heavily on tourism.

But none of that seemed to matter Tuesday as members of the People's Alliance for Democracy, which led the protest, reveled at the fall of Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat.

"We will party all night long before leaving tomorrow," said Saisuri Pantupradij, a 45-year-old woman who camped out at Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi international airport. "It's sad to say goodbye, but our job here is done. So we must go home."

Jubilant celebration
She and four other women, all wearing yellow feather boas, were dancing and singing karaoke to a Thai folk song in the main hall of the airport terminal.

Around them, thousands celebrated, waving Thailand's red white and blue flag, and cheering their nation, their king and themselves.

Still, the protest alliance, which crippled the country's administration by occupying the offices of the prime minister three months ago and saw the courts sack two prime ministers it campaigned against, vowed to resume its militant actions if future developments displeased them.

The group is seeking to purge the nation of the influence of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, whom they accuse of massive corruption and seeking to undermine the country's revered constitutional monarch, King Bhumibol Adulyadej. He was ousted by a September 2006 military coup.

On Tuesday, the country's Constitutional Court found Somchai's People's Power Party, the Machima Thipatai party and the Chart Thai party guilty of committing fraud in the December 2007 elections that brought the coalition to power.

"Dishonest political parties undermine Thailand's democratic system," said Constitutional Court President Chat Chalavorn.

Power purge
The ruling sent Somchai, Thaksin's brother-in-law, and 59 executives of the three parties into political exile and barred them from politics for five years. Of the 59, 24 are lawmakers who will have to abandon their parliamentary seats.

"It is not a problem. I was not working for myself. Now I will be a full-time citizen," Somchai told reporters following the ruling.

The current coalition will remain in power. But Deputy Prime Minister Chaowarat Chandeerakul will become the caretaker prime minister, said Suparak Nakboonnam, a government spokeswoman. She said Parliament will have to pick a new prime minister within 30 days.

Somchai had become increasingly isolated in recent weeks. Neither the army, a key player in Thai politics, nor King Bhumibol offered firm backing. Palace circles have not hidden their enmity toward Thaksin and his allies, rattling a decades old consensus of absolute respect for the monarchy.

But lawmakers of the three dissolved parties who escaped the ban can join other parties, try to cobble together a new coalition and then choose a new prime minister. If their fragile unity fails, new elections are the likeliest outcome — with the chance that Thaksin's allies would again triumph, setting off a whole new cycle of protests.


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