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BANGKOK, April 4 (Xinhua) -- Embattled Thai Prime
Minister Thaksin Shinawatra announced here Tuesday night he would not accept
premiership in the upcoming formation of government amid escalating political
crisis calling him to step down.
The remarks were made shortly after his audience with the kingdom's revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej at his
seaside palace in southern Hua Hin Tuesday afternoon.
Thaksin said he made the decision to step down out of
the respect to the King, who will celebrate the 60th anniversary of taking the
throne this year.
"My reason for not accepting the post of prime
minister is because this year is an auspicious year for the king, whose 60th
anniversary on the throne is just 60 days away," he said.
Thaksin said he would remain in the position of caretaker
prime minister until Parliament selects the new prime minister, adding
his replacement would be elected once parliament resumes within the next 30
days.
"We have no time to quarrel. I want to see Thai
people unite and forget what has happened," he said.
According to preliminary results, Thaksin's TRT party
grabbed 16 million of the 28 million popular ballot, some 57 percent of all the
votes cast. Meanwhile, the "no vote" has also mounted to around 10 million,
which the opposition said has showed TRT is facing a crisis of trust from
voters.
The caretaker premier said he would like to thank the
28 million people who came to the poll and the 16 million who voted for him and
his TRT party.
In a live interview Monday night, Thaksin claimed the
party's election victory, saying he saw no reason to resign as the party was
still backed by 16 million voters.
During last year's election, TRT won 19 million votes and
swept 377 parliamentary seats.
The caretaker prime minister floated the idea of
setting up an independent committee to work on national reconciliation. He
suggested that it be composed of non-partisan individuals and gather different
opinions and find common grounds to seek reconciliation.
However, the offer was flatly turned down by his foes.
Democrat Party leader Abhisit Vejjajiva told reporters Tuesday the
opposition would run in by-elections if Thaksin quit at the moment.
Suriyasai Katasila of the People's Alliance for Democracy, an
ad hoc coalition which spearheaded the street campaigns, promised to
end their protest if the premier makes an official announcement of
resignation.
Tens of thousands of protestors have held regular
weekend rallies demanding Thaksin to resign over the past two months, accusing
the tycoon-turned-politician of corruption, abuse of power and cronyism.
The anti-Thaksin campaign inflamed in late January
after Thaksin's family sold its controlling stake in telecom giant Shin Corp. to
a Singapore state-owned investment company for 1.9 billion US dollars.
Critics alleged the sale involved insider trading and
tax dodges, and complained that a key national asset is now in a foreign
government's hands.
On Feb. 24, the premier abruptly dissolved the parliament
and called snap elections on April 2 as a way out of political dilemma
which has thrown the country onto the brink of chaos.
Despite the boycott by three major opposition
parties, Thaksin has determined to push forward the polls which he portrayed as
a referendum on his rule.
The boycott, combined with the disqualification of
some 400 obscure-party candidates, has transformed the election into a one-party
race in 278 constituencies, where TRT was running unopposed.
Early return revealed that the party failed to meet
the threshold of minimum 20 percent votes in 38 constituencies to claim victory.
The constitution requires all seats to be filled before parliament can convene.
The Election Commission (EC) said by-elections would be
held in empty seats, most of which are in the opposition-dominated South. But
there is no guarantee that any further rounds of voting would produce the
remaining MPs.
Sworn in five years ago, the CEO-style telecom tycoon has
steered his country out of the shadow of 1997 financial crisis and boosted
the sustainable growth of its economy. He also gained credits in handling the
2004 tsunami and in the battle against bird flu.
He is the first ever premier who has fulfilled his
term in years and being re-elected in decades in a country long disturbed by
coup.
The embattled prime minister had repeatedly said he
would not bow to "mob rule" and would like people to decide whether he should
stay.
Thaksin on Monday said he was satisfied with the votes
his party has received in the polls, but still he has to quit to spare the
country of further conflicts and splitting.
"Let's clean up our house and stop the chaos," he said in the televised speech. Enditem |