Thais head to polls with Thaksin tipped for landslide re-election
Polling began in Thailand's elections Sunday with Prime Minister
Thaksin Shinawatra poised for a sweeping victory which would
deliver the premier an unprecedented second term in power.
Voting booths in the kingdom's 400 constituencies opened at
8:00 am (0100 GMT) and will close seven hours later, with
projected unofficial results by television stations expected late
Sunday.
"A lot of people are paying attention to this election because
they want to see if people still believe in Thaksin or not," a
60-year-old man, who was one of the first to enter the booths at
Bangkok's Yannawa public school, told AFP.
Thaksin, a former policeman and billionaire telecom tycoon who
stormed to power with a landslide election win in January 2001 at
the head of his then-new Thai Rak Thai-party, is aiming to govern
without a coalition partner this term.
"We want to be a single-party government," Thaksin told a
cheering crowd in Bangkok at his last rally Friday, distancing
himself from current partner, the Chart Thai party.
Thailand's 44 million eligible voters were casting ballots six
weeks after the Indian Ocean tsunami slammed into six southern
provinces, killing nearly 5,400 people.
Thaksin's party is targeting at least 350 seats out of the 500
up for grabs, a margin of victory that opponents fear would make
the government an elected dictatorship.
With so many seats under TRT's belt, the opposition would be
unable to launch any censure motion against Thaksin or his party,
which critics fear hands too much power to the premier whom they
label as being increasingly authoritarian.
In a country where every previous elected government has
fallen either to military coups or political squabbling,
Thaksin's is the first to survive a full four-year term.
The mogul has largely delivered on his promises to revive
Thailand's fortunes after the 1997 Asian financial crisis and has
proved a popular leader.
Pre-election polls are officially banned, but a survey by the
respected Matichon newspaper and Dsurakitvanid University
predicted that TRT would win 349 seats, up from its present share
of 320.
The poll left the Democrats well short of their goal with just
101 seats, giving Chart Thai 37 and the new Mahachon party 11,
with one seat each for the Social Action Party and the Labor
party.
The Democrats are only hoping for 201 seats, but they have
been unable to recover from their crushing defeat in 2001 and
their ensuing leadership split.
The prospect of an even more powerful Thaksin raises alarm
among groups such as Human Rights Watch, which considers Thailand
"a country of high concern."
Critics are concerned over Thaksin's military crackdown on a
13-month Islamic insurgency in Thailand's southernmost provinces,
which has left more than 580 dead and sparked two controversial
clashes that ended with the deaths of hundreds of militants or
protesters.
Thaksin's war on drugs left some 2,275 suspected drug
offenders dead in apparent extrajudicial killings between
February and May 2003.
His massive edge going into the polls -- which has not been
swayed by the crises that have marred his term -- has not done
away with old-school political traditions like vote-buying, fraud
and violence.
Election Commission officials have received more than 90
allegations of fraud, vote-buying or other irregularities, while
senior police officials said 14 people had been killed in
pre-election violence this year.
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