Thousands of protestors have gathered in the Thai capital Bangkok, calling for the resignation of Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra after a phone call she had with the former Cambodian leader Hun Sen was leaked. In the call, she addressed Hun Sen as "uncle" and said a Thai military commander handling a recent border dispute "just wanted to look cool and said things that are not useful". The call has sparked public anger and lead to a key partner in her ruling coalition to quit. Paetongtarn apologised, but defended the call as a "negotiation technique". Before leaving to visit flood-hit northern Thailand, Paetongtarn told reporters it is the people's "right to protest, as long as it's peaceful". Saturday's rally was the largest of its kind since the ruling Pheu Thai party came to power in 2023. Thousands braved the monsoon rain and blocked the roads at the Victory Monument war memorial in Bangkok, waving Thai flags and holding placards reading slogans such as: "PM is enemy of state". Protest leader Parnthep Pourpongpan said the prime minister "should step aside because she is the problem". Seri Sawangmue, 70, travelled overnight by bus from the country's north to join the protest. He told AFP that he was there "to protect Thailand's sovereignty and to say the PM is unfit". "I've lived through many political crises and I know where this is going," he added. Paetongtarn has said she will no longer hold future calls with the former Cambodian leader, but Parnthep told Reuters that many Thai people felt she and her influential father were being manipulated by Hun Sen. Paetongtarn, 38, is the daughter of Thaksin Shinawatra, the deposed former prime minister who returned to Thailand last August after 15 years in exile. She has only been in office for 10 months and is the country's second female prime minister, with the first being her aunt Yingluck Shinawatra. Protesters are calling for the end of Shinawatra leadership. The rally was organised by the United Force of the Land, a coalition of largely nationalist activists who have protested against other Shinawatra-led governments for over two decades. In a statement read to crowds, the group said the executive branch and parliament were not working "in the interest of democracy and constitutional monarchy". As well as the flags and placards, people carried umbrellas to protect themselves from the rain. When it stopped, a rainbow formed over Victory Monument. On Tuesday the Constitutional Court will decide whether to take up a petition by senators seeking Paetongtarn's removal for alleged unprofessionalism over the Hun Sen call. Hun Sen said he had shared the audio clip with 80 politicians and one of them leaked it. He later shared the entire 17-minute recording on his Facebook page. The call was in to do with a recent dispute between Cambodia and Thailand, which saw tensions increase in May after a Cambodian soldier was killed in a border clash, plunging ties to their lowest in more than a decade. But the dispute between the two nations dates back to more than a century, when the borders were drawn after the French occupation of Cambodia. Both have imposed border restrictions on each other, while Cambodia has banned Thai imports from food to electricity and internet, as well as Thai television and cinema dramas. Despite the tensions between their countries, the Shinawatras' friendship with the Hun family goes back decades, and Hun Sen and Paetongtarn's father consider each other "godbrothers".
Thousands protest in Bangkok calling for Thai PM to resign
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"Mass Protests Erupt in Bangkok Demanding Resignation of Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra"
TruthLens AI Summary
In Bangkok, thousands of demonstrators gathered to demand the resignation of Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra following the leak of a controversial phone call she had with former Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen. During the call, Shinawatra referred to Hun Sen as 'uncle' and criticized a Thai military commander involved in a border dispute, stating that he 'just wanted to look cool and said things that are not useful.' This disclosure incited public outrage, leading to the exit of a crucial partner from her governing coalition. Although she apologized for the remarks, Shinawatra defended the conversation as a necessary 'negotiation technique.' Speaking to reporters before her visit to flood-affected regions in northern Thailand, she acknowledged the people's right to protest, provided that it remained peaceful. The Saturday rally represented the largest public demonstration since her party, Pheu Thai, assumed power in 2023, with many protesters braving monsoon conditions to voice their dissent at the Victory Monument in Bangkok.
Protesters displayed Thai flags and held signs with slogans such as 'PM is enemy of state,' illustrating their discontent with her leadership. Parnthep Pourpongpan, a protest leader, asserted that Shinawatra should resign, labeling her as the core issue. Among the attendees was 70-year-old Seri Sawangmue, who traveled from northern Thailand to express his concern for the nation’s sovereignty and to criticize the Prime Minister's capabilities. Many participants believe that both Shinawatra and her influential father, Thaksin Shinawatra, are being manipulated by Hun Sen. The ongoing tensions between Thailand and Cambodia are rooted in historical disputes over border delineations, exacerbated by recent military confrontations. The Shinawatra family's ties with the Hun family span decades, complicating the current political landscape. As the Constitutional Court prepares to decide on a petition regarding Shinawatra's potential removal due to her handling of the Hun Sen call, the political climate remains charged with uncertainty and unrest.
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