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| Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra
answers reporters' questions at the Thai Rak Thai party headquarter in
Bangkok April 3, 2006. (Xinhua/Reuters) | BANGKOK,
April 3 (Xinhua) -- Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra said Monday that his
Thai Rak Thai (TRT) party had mustered some 57 percent of the popular votes in
Sunday's parliamentary election, base on estimates of unofficial results.
Thaksin said in a TV interview that the TRT had won
16 million of the total 28 million ballots cast in Sunday's polling. And "no
votes" plus votes for other parties were altogether 10 million.
"Thai Rak Thai today received about 60 percent of the
vote. If you include the invalid ballots, it's about 57-42," he said.
It was his first major remarks on Sunday's election,
portrayed as a virtual national referendum on his beleagued leadership.
Thaksin had pledged to step down if he won less than
half of the votes in the snap election.
He proposed setting up a reconciliation committee to
unlock political chaos in which several groups of people holding opinionson the
current situation should be involved.
"Members of the committee could be picked up from
several sectors of the society, including judges and academics," said Thaksin,
hoping that everyone would put aside differences of opinions and think for the
sake of the country.
Earlier, iTV's own tally indicated that TRT had only
received 44.4 percent of the popular votes nationwide with 85 percent counted,
or 28,084,686 ballots.
Comprehensive voting results have not yet been
released by the Election Commission (EC).
However, it has announced that by-elections have to
be held in 38 of 400 constituencies after ruling party candidates failed to
reach the required 20 percent votes in uncontested constituencies.
The boycott from three main opposition parties had
transformed the polling into a one-party race in 278 parliamentary
constituencies. All seats of the 500-member House of Representatives have to be
filled before a new government is formed.
Thaksin said that after formation of the new cabinet,
he planned to set up a committee in charge of the constitutional reform.
TRT party won all of the 36 seats in Bangkok, though
it pocketed only 46 percent of the votes, compared to 50 percent "abstention"
ballots.
The EC said turnout of this year's general election
was about 60 percent, a decline from the 72 percent in 2005.
The anti-Thaksin campaign swelled in February after
Thaksin's family sold its controlling stake in telecom giant Shin Corp. to
aSingapore state-owned investment company for 1.9 billion US dollars.
Thaksin called the snap elections in a bid to defuse
the crisisbut the opposition is unlikely to bow to the election results.
Maj-Gen. Chamlong Srimuang, Thaksin's former mentor
and co-leader of PAD, has threatened to hold persistent rallies, forcing the
premier to step down. Analysts predict the political stalematewould drag on as
long as Thaksin remains in office, no matter whatoutcome of the election.
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