Prime-minister of Thailand forced to step down: ALL explained BEFORE parallel Ukraine

LastProphet

Senior Member
Apr 26, 2014
746
23
53
THAILAND Prime minister and part of cabinet forced to step down by court
BANGKOK (AP) — Yingluck Shinawatra was ordered to step down after the Constitutional Court found her guilty in an abuse of power case.
"Transferring government officials must be done in accordance with moral principle," the court said in its ruling, read aloud on live television for almost 90 minutes. "Transferring with a hidden agenda is not acceptable."
The ruling also forced out nine Cabinet members who the court said were complicit.
The ruling also casts doubt on whether new elections planned for July will take place, which would anger Yingluck's mostly rural supporters who have called for a major rally Saturday in Bangkok.
It also remains far from clear whether her opponents will be able to achieve other key demands, including creating a reform council overseen by a leader of their choice ...

Prime-minister of Thailand forced to step down was explained by Last Prophet BEFORE the act "Ukraine's President Yanukovich forced to step down".
Most incredible is NOT that only ONE explained it in advance.
Most incredible is that NOBODY else will explain it now, AFTER it happened.
Proof: previous lines, with Thailand replaced by Ukraine, were posted hours after the act "Yanukovich flees to Russia".
More than 2 months later NOBODY else explained what happened in the Ukraine, which is EXACTLY what just happened in Thailand.

Notes
May 7, 2014 THAILAND
Court forces out Thai leader, part of her Cabinet

BASICS
From November 2013:
Parallel scripts with illuminati suicide bombers: "THAILAND Prime minister and UKRAINE's president forced to step down"
Black Is White - have the human cattle robotically repeat it: Illuminati's third commandment: EU populace awakening to dictatorship rewritten as "Ukraine fight to join the EU democracy"

Blog
End Times Prophet: Thailand Ukraine parallel scripts gov forced to step down: Most incredible is NOT that only ONE explained it in advance
 
Blessed be the Thai that binds...
:eusa_shifty:
WITNESSES GIVE ACCOUNT OF HOW THAI COUP UNFOLDED
May 23,`14 -- Thailand's all-powerful army chief started the extraordinary meeting by asking participants to give a progress report on their "homework."
The participants were the country's most important political rivals, plus four Cabinet ministers from the embattled government, election commissioners and senators. The homework: solving a crisis so complex it has split the Southeast Asian nation for nearly a decade, fueling repeated spasms of bloodshed and upheaval. They didn't know it then, but they only had about two hours to figure it all out. Just after 4:30 p.m. Thursday, the conference room was sealed by soldiers, and the man who called the meeting, Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha, became Thailand's new ruler.

Accounts of those pivotal moments at a military complex in Bangkok known as the Army Club, relayed by two lawmakers who were present and Thai media, indicate that Prayuth had no intention of engaging in the kind of protracted negotiation necessary to mediate a conflict that reignited last year when protesters took to the streets. The sequence of events raises questions about whether the meeting was a ruse to neutralize anyone who might oppose the coup. The fact it happened so swiftly suggests that Prayuth was already planning to do what demonstrators had pushed for all along: overthrow the government, if the two sides could not reach a compromise.

There was never much hope they would. The intractable divide plaguing Thailand today is part of an increasingly precarious power struggle between an elite, army-backed conservative minority based in Bangkok and the south that can no longer win elections, and the political machine of exiled ex-Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra and his supporters in the rural north who backed him because of populist policies such as virtually free health care. The army deposed Thaksin in a 2006 coup. And on Friday, it detained his sister, former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, who was forced from office earlier this month by a controversial court verdict of abuse of power, which she denies.

When Prayuth declared martial law on Tuesday, the 60-year-old officer insisted he was only trying to restore stability and force all sides to talk. The next day, he summoned rival factions and Cabinet officials who had little choice but to show up. After that initial two-hour meeting, everyone was told to come back with proposals to end the crisis, said a lawmaker who attended and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject.

MORE

See also:

THAI COUP MAKERS HOLD EX-PM, DISPERSE PROTESTS
May 23,`14 -- Ousted members of Thailand's former government surrendered to the new military junta Friday, as soldiers forcefully dispersed hundreds of anti-coup activists who defied a ban on large-scale gatherings to protest the army's seizure of power.
Troops detained at least two activists during the protest in downtown Bangkok, which descended into scuffles but ended without injury and marked one of the first open challenges to the military since Thursday's coup. The junta, though, remained firmly in charge, summoning more than 100 top political figures - the entire ousted government, their associates and a handful of their opponents. It also banned those on its wanted list from leaving the country.

Among the officials who showed up at an army compound in Bangkok were former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, sacked earlier this month for nepotism by the Constitutional Court, and her temporary replacement Niwattumrong Boonsongpaisan, according to Yingluck's aide Wim Rungwattanachinda. After about 30 minutes, Yingluck left the facility and was taken to another army location by soldiers, said Wim, who added that it appeared she would not be immediately released. It was unclear what the military's intentions were beyond the summons, which it said had been issued "to keep peace and order and solve the country's problems."

By nightfall, dozens of the VIPs who turned themselves in were still being held, although at least eight ex-Cabinet ministers had been released. Education Minister Chaturon Chaisang, an outspoken critic of the military's intervention in politics, remained in hiding. Chaturon said in a Facebook post that the coup would only worsen the country's political atmosphere. He vowed not to turn himself in, but said he would not resist arrest. Most of the country was calm, and there was little military presence on Bangkok's streets. Although life had largely returned to normal during the day, an overnight curfew from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. was still in effect.

Restrictions on TV broadcasts and on posting inflammatory comments on social media remained in effect, and many Thais were reluctant to comment publicly on the coup. There were no reports of any major unrest, including in the former government's political strongholds in the north. In the northeast city of Chiang Mai, about 100 anti-coup demonstrators took to the streets, but no violence was reported and the protesters dispersed on their own. The army staged the coup Thursday just after a military-hosted meeting of political rivals to resolve the country's political deadlock.

MORE
 
Buddhist Thailand...baaah!...stands condemned...execution-homidices human beings in death chambers for drug smuggling/drug selling etc, even if the people are poor and were starving and homeless.
...or set up.

And for a whole lot of other objectionable sins.

Buddhist Thailand...another place not on my Christmas card and travel lists.
 
Last edited:

Forum List

Back
Top