_http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/asia/article6911291.ece?print=y
es&randnum=1257890414515_ 
(http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/asia/article6911291.ece?print=yes&randnum=1257890414515)
 

 
 







 

 
>From Times Online 
November 10, 2009


Opponents of Thaksin Shinawatra threaten protests as ousted  leader visits 
Cambodia


 
Richard Lloyd Parry, Asia Editor  



 
Thai opponents of the ousted Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra threatened a 
 mass rally against him as he arrived in Cambodia today, on a visit that 
has  brought tension between the two neighbours to fever pitch.  
Mr Thaksin was welcomed by his host, the Cambodian Prime Minister, Hun Sen, 
 whose appointment of him as an “economic adviser” has infuriated the Thai 
 Government. The anti-Thaksin activists known as the “Yellow Shirts” 
announced a  mass rally against the former Prime Minister in Bangkok this 
Sunday, 
after  remarks which he made in an interview with The Times about the 
country’s  royal family.  
Previous Yellow Shirt rallies have provoked fights with Mr Thaksin’s  
supporters and brought chaos and paralysis to Bangkok. Last year the group took 
 
over Government House and seized both the city’s airports, stranding tens of 
 thousands of passengers and damaging the country’s tourism industry.  
Now, tensions are at a peak again as Mr Thaksin returns to southeast Asia,  
the closest he has been to Thailand since he was forced out in a military 
coup  in 2006.  
On Cambodian television, Mr Hun Sen was seen embracing his guest and was 
said  to have described him as an “eternal friend” and “the best adviser with 
economic  leadership”. On Thursday Mr Thaksin will give a lecture to an 
audience of  ministers and government officials.  
“Thaksin is here for the economy and no activities related to politics,” 
Phay  Siphan, spokesman for the Cambodian Cabinet, said. “It is an honour for 
 Cambodia's economic sector and we hope that Cambodians nationwide welcome 
him  warmly.” But it is clear that Mr Hun Sen’s hospitality has less to do 
with Mr  Thaksin’s economic expertise than with the fraught relationship 
between Phnom  Penh and Bangkok.  
Historically, their differences date back to the medieval Khmer Empire, a  
Cambodian civilisation that ruled over large parts of Thailand. Nowadays,  
Cambodia is much poorer than its former vassal, but a sense of resentment and 
 rivalry lingers on both sides that periodically flares into violence and  
vitriol.  
Last year, a handful of soldiers on both sides died in small skirmishes 
over  a few hundred square metres of disputed territory close to the ancient 
Preah  Vihear Buddhist temple. Thailand’s current Foreign Minister, Kasit 
Piromya, is a  Yellow Shirt leader who, before his appointment described Mr Hun 
Sen as a “a  gentleman with the mind of a gangster”. Now the Cambodian 
leader is taking his  revenge by flaunting his friendship with the Thai 
Government’s bête noire.  
Thailand has responded by recalling its ambassador to Phnom Penh and moving 
 to cancel an agreement jointly to explore energy reserves in the Gulf of  
Thailand. It has begun extradition proceedings against Mr Thaksin, who last 
year  was sentenced to two years in prison for corruption perpetrated when 
he was  Prime Minister. It has no hope of success, since Cambodia regards the 
case as a  political matter, and therefore excluded from the extradition 
treaty between the  two countries.  
Mr Thaksin told The Times at the weekend that he has no intention of  
settling in Thailand but will visit from time to time from his exile in Dubai.  
But his proximity to Thailand, and especially to the country’s northeast 
where  he has his most loyal support, is deeply unsettling to the Government, 
which is  supported by army generals who propelled Mr Thaksin from power.  
In April Mr Thaksin promised his supporters: “If there is  the sound of 
gunfire, of soldiers shooting the people, I'll return immediately  to lead you 
to march on Bangkok.”. On Saturday he told The Times: “If I  were to start 
the march I would start from the northeastern part of Thailand, on  the soil 
of Thailand, but I will have to enter Thailand from the border. I can  
enter Thailand from Laos, Cambodia, Myanmar.”  
“Tonight I will meet and have dinner with Hen Sen and his family,” he 
wrote  today in a message to his supporters on his Twitter online feed. “I miss 
home so  much.”  
George Yeo, the Foreign Minister of Singapore, said that members of the  
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) were concerned about relations  
between Thailand and Cambodia.  
"We are very concerned about this bilateral problem between two fraternal  
members of Asean and we hope they will find a way to reconcile and to act 
with  restraint," Mr Yeo said. 








 
 
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