Anti-government protesters celebrating the court's decision against the ruling party during a demonstration at the Suvarnabhumi airport in Bangkok. -- PHOTO: AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE
BANGKOK - THAILAND'S acting Prime Minister Chavarat Charnvirakul confirmed on Wednesday that parliament would vote for a new prime minister next Monday.
Protests: key dates
September 2005: Media tycoon Sondhi Limthongkul starts the People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) street campaign to oust Thaksin Shinawatra.
Sept 19, 2006: Military stages a coup, overthrowing Thaksin.
BANGKOK - THAI anti-government activists yesterday halted a protest movement that had paralysed Bangkok's airports after a court stripped the prime minister of his post and dissolved the ruling party.
The royalist People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) said it would lift its siege of the two main airports and end a 192-day campaign that has seen off two prime ministers allied to exiled former leader Thaksin Shinawatra.
HONG KONG - THAILAND'S court ruling to dismiss Premier Somchai Wongsawat had prevented a slide into chaos but there is no quick solution to the political turmoil, the head of Asean said on Wednesday.
'At least it has put a stop to the slide into chaos, even more choas,' Mr Surin Pitsuwan, head of the Association of South-East Asian Nations (Asean), told Reuters in an interview.
BANGKOK - THAILAND'S parliament is slated to convene on Monday to choose a new prime minister after this week's dismissal of three ruling parties, teeing up another possible confrontation between pro- and anti-government forces.
The following scenarios look at how things might play out:
BANGPA-IN (Thailand) - TWO years after being ousted in a coup and having two of his political allies fired as prime minister by the courts, former leader Thaksin Shinawatra remains the champion of many Thais outside Bangkok.
'Speaking truly from my heart, I want him to come back to lead the country again,' food shop owner Kasem Puapan said on Wednesday in Bangpa-In, a small industrial town 60 kilometres north of Bangkok.
'I have spoken with the president of parliament and we agreed to push for a vote for the new prime minister on Dec 8,' Mr Chavarat told reporters, a day after a court banned Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat from politics for five years.
Victorious anti-government protesters lifted their siege of Bangkok's two airports on Wednesday while leaders of the ousted government named a caretaker prime minister to lead the politically chaotic kingdom.
The country's immediate crisis, which virtually severed Thailand's air links to the outside world for a week, appeared to be over and the People's Alliance for Democracy said it was ending six months of daily anti-government protests.
But the alliance warned it would be on the streets again if a new government tried to return to its past policies.
A court decision on Tuesday forced the country's prime minister from office and disbanded the three top ruling coalition parties. But they quickly were reconstituted under different guises and leaders met Wednesday and named the deputy prime minister as the country's caretaker leader.
A spokesman for the protest alliance, Mr Parnthep Wonguapan, said protesters at Bangkok's international and domestic airports were ordered to 'clean up and pack their belongings' before leaving the two sites.
The first commercial airliner - a flight by the national airline Thai Airways from the resort island of Phuket - was scheduled to land at Suvarnabhumi international airport at 2 pm (3pm Singapore time), said airline spokesman Ajcharnaporn na Songhkla.
In what was billed as a hand-over ceremony, Mr Vudhibhandhu Vichairatana, the chairman of the Airports of Thailand, hugged and shook hands with alliance leaders in front of a Buddhist shrine as protesters danced to folk music and trucks loaded with their gear rolled out of the airport.
'We want to clean up the airport before we leave. We want PAD (the alliance) to have a good image,' said Mr Bow Piyapat, a souvenir maker, as she wielded her mop around rows of check-in counters at Suvarnabhumi.
A stream of cars, trucks and buses transported the protesters out of the airport.
'See you later when the country needs us!' one of them shouted, as protesters waved and honked.
About 700 soldiers inspected the airport for bombs and weapons, and airport security officials set up a perimeter around the airport as they dismantled blockades and checkpoints set up by the alliance.
But the image of the alliance as well as Thailand in general has been battered, especially among some 300,000 travellers still stranded by last week's airport takeovers. The months of protests and political uncertainty is also hammering the economy and vital tourism industry.
At least six people have been killed and scores injured in clashes in recent months.
The protesters - who seek to eliminate the one-person, one-vote system - are also seeking to purge the nation of the influence of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra.
They accuse Thaksin of massive corruption and seeking to undermine the country's revered constitutional monarch, King Bhumibol Adulyadej.
Thaksin was ousted by a September 2006 military coup, but the alliance alleges that governments voted into office since then have been proxies for the exiled Thaksin.
'The PAD will return if another (Thaksin) proxy government is formed or anyone tries to amend the constitution or the law to whitewash some politicians or to subdue the monarch's royal authority,' one of the protest leaders, Mr Sondhi Limthongkul, warned on Tuesday night.
Earlier on Tuesday, Somchai's People's Power Party, the Machima Thipatai party and the Chart Thai party were found guilty by the Constitutional Court of committing fraud in the December 2007 elections that brought the coalition to power.
The ruling banned Somchai, Thaksin's brother-in-law, and 59 executives of the three parties from politics for five years. Of the 59, 24 are lawmakers who will have to abandon their parliamentary seats.
A meeting on Wednesday among the three ousted parties, which vowed to stick together in a coalition, endorsed Deputy Prime Minister Chaowarat Chandeerakul as the caretaker prime minister.
Members of the three parties, who were not banned from politics, are expected to form new parties that will form an alliance with three smaller parties of the outgoing coalition.
The coalition will then have to pick a full-time prime minister and get parliament's endorsement within 30 days.
The anti-government alliance claims Thailand's rural majority - who gave landslide election victories to the Thaksin camp - is too poorly educated to responsibly choose their representatives and says they are susceptible to vote buying.
It wants the country to abandon the system of one-person, one-vote, and instead have a mixed system in which most representatives are chosen by profession and social group.
Mr Chaturon Chaisaeng, a former Thaksin Cabinet member, suggested there could be civil war if the protest alliance presses for a non-elected government. -- AP