Bangkokgo - Political Bribery and corruption in Thailand
Thaksin Shinawatra will now contest his innocence & stay in Thai Polics now in Cambodia after the court disbanned the ruling PPP party for cheating?? so another Pm bids goodbye & Thaksin will be ready to fly back to Thailand - -once they get the party thing reorganized for the umptenth time. It may be god for Thailand to start afresh as Thaksin can rein in the parties and get the economy boosted but the new PM under the Democrats is doing an excellent job in lifting the expectations of the poor and the Thai people.
NEWS ON THE THAI POLITICAL FRONT.
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2008 BRIBERY NEWS FROM THAILAND
NEWS ON THE THAI POLITICAL FRONT. YOU CAN'T BEAT THESE GUYS--- THE NAME OF THE GAME IS MONEY & THE PRIZE IS POWER
When the power of love overcomes the love of power
the world will know peace. Jimi Hendrix (1942-1970)
THAILAND COURT & PAD wnats the Govt out

Court dissolves Thai government for election fraud
Associated press Dec 2 2008
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) The demos are over. Thailand's Constitutional Court has dissolved the main ruling party and banned the prime minister along with 36 party executives from politics for 5 years. The ruling sinks Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat's government, which has faced strident protests for months seeking its ouster. The court found the People's Power Party and its executive members, including Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat, guilty of electoral fraud.
Tuesday's ruling raises hopes that thousands of anti-government protesters will end their siege of the country's two main airports. Constitutional Court President Chat Chalavorn said the "court has decided to dissolve the party to set a political standard and an example." He said "dishonest political parties undermine Thailand's democratic system."

Thai ruling party ordered dissolved
Al Jazeera Dec 2 2008
Government supporters had surrounded the court to try to stop the hearing [EPA] Thailand's Constitutional Court has ordered the dissolution of the ruling People Power party for electoral fraud. The court also ruled on Tuesday that Somchai Wongsawat, the prime minister, and 36 other party members be banned from politics for five years.
Chat Chonlaworn, the head of the nine-judge court panel, said "as the court decided to dissolve the People Power party, therefore the leader of the party and party executives must be banned from politics for five years". "The court had no other option," he said. The court had earlier changed venues for the hearing after hundreds of government supporters surrounded the building to try to stop the hearing. Also on Tuesday, a coalition of Thai business groups urged the ruling party to step down as a way of defusing the political crisis.
The Joint Standing Committee on Commerce, Industry and Banking also called on the anti-government People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) to end its "illegal" blockade of Bangkok's airports and said the government should call a snap election.

Boy Thai politics gets crazy but I new this would happen and my brothers can smoke a storm now and relax till the next episode
Court bans Thai PM from politics
By ABC
Thailand's Constitutional Court has dissolved the country's ruling parties and banned the Prime Minister, Somchai Wongsawat, from politics for five years. Protesters occupying Thailand's airports have broken into celebration. Thailand is again without a known leader tonight with a ruling by the country's Constitutional Court dissolving the key parties in the ruling coalition and banning Mr Somchai's from politics for five years. The parties were found guilty of vote fraud during elections a year ago. While Mr Somchai and other party executives will be affected by the ban, other politicians from their parties will be able to form other parties without losing their parliamentary seats.
Members of Thailand's ruling People Power Party (PPP) who escaped the ban will "move on" and form another government, a former minister said."The verdict comes as no surprise to all of us," Jakrapob Penkair said."But our members are determined to move on and we will form a government again out of the majority that we believe we still have." Mr Jakrapob, a close associate of Mr Thaksin, was speaking from outside Thailand but refused to give his precise location. Crowds of anti-government protesters within Suvarnabhumi international airport could be heard erupting into applause on hearing the news. There is speculation a new party loyal to former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra may be formed with his cousin at its head. Meanwhile, Thailand has postponed its hosting of an Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) summit until March due to its deepening political crisis, government spokesman Nattawut Saikuar said. No comment Mr Somchai has been marooned in the northern pro-government stronghold of Chiang Mai since Wednesday. He was due to attend a military ceremony later ahead of the king's December 5 birthday. He has so far made no comment on his party's dissolution. The judge, wearing a black robe with a scarlet collar, read the order live on national television.
He appealed for calm, saying: "No matter whether you are satisfied or not with the verdict, we ask you to accept it." About 500 angry government supporters massed outside the administrative court, where judges read the ruling after earlier rallies by the group forced them to change location.
Riot police with bullet-proof shields stood guard, as tensions in Thailand remained on the brink with the anti-government People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) continuing their week-long crippling airport siege. The ruling came after a blast early Tuesday killed one protester and injured 22 others from the rival PAD at the domestic Don Mueang airport. He died from shrapnel wounds to the stomach, an emergency services spokeswoman told AFP.
It also came just hours after the royalist PAD ended a three-month sit-in at the prime minister's offices in Bangkok following a series of similar attacks, and redeployed supporters to Don Mueang and the Suvarnabhumi international airport.
The PAD launched its campaign in late May, accusing the government of acting as a proxy for Mr Thaksin - Somchai's brother-in-aw -- and of being hostile to the monarchy. The PAD, who dress in yellow which they say symbolises their devotion to Thailand's much-revered king, are backed by the Bangkok business elite and middle classes, along with elements in the military and the palace. Mr Thaksin, whose supporters dress in red, is hugely popular with Thailand's rural and urban poor, especially in the north, his native area. The PPP had boycotted the court proceedings, saying the court had made up its mind to disband the party. Ruling party lawmaker Pichit Srivorakhan said before the ruling that the legal process had been unfair, adding: "We are rejecting any verdict." They have said they are ready to move lawmakers into a shell party called Pheu Thai (For Thais), and continue administering the country, but there was no immediate reaction.
The unrest continued to take a heavy toll on the 350,000 travellers stranded in Thailand by the crisis, with three tourists including two Canadians dying in road accidents as they tried to flee the "Land of Smiles."No-1 Deputy Prime Minister Chaovarat Chanweerakul will become caretaker prime minister pending a meeting of the caretaker Cabinet, former PM's Office Ministers Sukhumpong Ngonkham said Tuesday. He said the caretaker Cabinet would make a former decision as to who should be caretaker prime minister replacing disqualified Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat.
The outgoing Director-General Wanchai Roujanavong is an authority on international crime and apparently corrupt politicians. His book 'Organised Crime in Thailand' details how politicians play a major part in organised crime in Thailand, how they avoid tax, buy votes, and to a certain extent control the courts, while at the same time playing the role of benefactor to the people.
PAD: entire Cabinet must leave office
The Nation
People's Alliance for Democracy leader Somsak Kosaisuk on Tuesday vowed to continue rallying at Don Mueang and Suvarnabhumi airports and demanded the departure of the entire Cabinet. Following the verdict on party disbandment, Somsak said the PAD would not allow the Cabinet to work in the caretaker capacity until the formation of the next government. He said every minister must depart along with Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat. Of 36 Cabinet members, 22 are not affected by the party disbandment and can carry on in the caretaker administration.
Pause in the battle
By Achara Ashayagachat Bangkok Post 3rd Dec 2008
Although it was much anticipated, the Constitution Court's verdict dissolving the three coalition parties is not likely to put an end to Thailand's protracted political crisis. At best, it may provide a brief calm to the heated strife until parliament reconvenes next week for an extraordinary session to select a new prime minister. Whether parliament is able to reconvene will depend on the People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD). The situation may explain the PAD's withdrawal from Government House, which it had illegally occupied for more than three months. Part of the move might have been strategic, as the PAD at the time wanted to beef up its demonstrations at Don Mueang and Suvarnabhumi airports. Part of it might have to do with its plan to vacate the seat of power for the new government it has been waiting for. But will the PAD be able to have its way? After all, the People Power party still has enough MPs - 221, after 12 were banned from politics by yesterday's rulings - to form a new coalition and propose a new prime minister. As for the PAD, even though it has given up on its siege of the airports, the damage it has done to the country's economy and image in the eyes of the international community will not be easily forgiven. It will have to be extremely careful about its next move. So, what does the PAD ultimately want? The PAD's demands seem to have a way of evolving along with the situation, although they are now repeating a call for an "impartial" government comprising of anyone - be they academics, business people, bureaucrats or politicians - except, of course, those from the Thaksin camp. The only way for them to achieve that is to prevent a new prime minister from being selected within the timeframe specified by the Constitution, thus triggering Section 7 of the charter under which certain rules may be suspended to break a crisis of electoral democracy. Only through this clause can the "impartial" or "national reconciliation" government comprising non-elected people be set up. Meanwhile, business people have proposed that a Democrat-led coalition be given a chance. Some people may have felt relief after former prime minister Somchai Wongsawat seemed to show no resistance to the court verdict and looked ready to abandon the premiership immediately after it was read. It was a good gesture on his part, albeit a belated one. If the former PM had indeed been determined to halt the political conflict, he should have dissolved the House when it became clear that he could not deal with the airport siege.The relief is likely to be short-lived, however, since in the end it is Mr Somchai's brother-in-law, the ousted premier and fugitive, Thaksin Shinawatra, who has been and will continue to be dictating the moves in this war game.Thaksin knows that he has not yet lost. Much more could happen. And it is becoming clear that neither Thaksin nor his opponent the PAD cares how much damage their fight will cause the country. Without the necessary number of MPs - unless there are some defections from the ruling PPP - the opposition Democrat party does not seem to have a decided gain from the parties' dissolution. It cannot form a new government anyway. And even if it could, the pro-PPP United Front for Democracy Against Dictatorship (UDD) would not let the party it sees as having done nothing, reap the windfall so easily. More protests will be in store.Another problem is that after this spate of party dissolutions and removal of party executives' political rights, there are only a few qualified choices left with which to form a viable cabinet. Indeed, with the "leftover" personnel they now have, it does not look like the PPP will be able to come up with an impressive prime minister or cabinet.In the final analysis, it does look like the crisis will go on in a vicious cycle. The new, incapable cabinet will again be rejected by the PAD and probably by the business people who are increasingly feeling the economic crunch and badly need a government which knows how to do its job well. Another lame-duck government would be the last thing they want.Meanwhile, most politicians will not think of doing anything now, except how to get around and amend Section 237 of the Constitution to get rid of the party dissolution clause which has kept them chained and crippled.The central question from now on is: will the PAD allow parliament to reconvene on Dec 8? If not, the group, which has already experienced protest fatigue, may face another backlash and see its support dwindle further.Another factor that should not be underestimated is the presumably angry "red shirts", and the possibility that they might be joined by those who feel wronged by the PAD's actions, too. A coalition of the wounded is always a dangerous one. These people might be willing to fight against bullets with their bare hands.
Mr Thaksin flies around the globe in the hands of the lord & listens in Cambodia and plans the next move in this exciting saga of whose the next PM..

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