http://www.ndtv.com/article/world/thailand-army-delegation-visits-china-amid-western-reproach-of-coup-539567

Thailand Army Delegation Visits China amid Western reproach of coup

World <http://www.ndtv.com/article/list/world/> | Reuters
<http://www.ndtv.com/topic/reuters> | Updated: June 11, 2014 11:55 IST





*Bangkok: * A delegation of Thai military commanders travelled to China on
Wednesday for talks on regional security and joint training exercises amid
Western unease over the Thai army's seizure of power in a coup last month.

General Surasak Kanjanarat, deputy permanent secretary for defence, said
the meeting was aimed at mapping out "future plans of action" with the
Chinese army, one of its oldest regional allies. He did not elaborate on
the plans.

The bid by Thailand's military rulers to strengthen ties with China comes
after Western powers, including old ally the United States, criticised the
May 22 coup. The junta has said it has China's support.

"This meeting will be to talk about ties ... and future plans of action and
exchange views on regional security," Surasak, the head of the delegation,
told reporters.

"We will discuss in which areas we could increase military training. We
will not talk about the situation in Thailand because it is not relevant."

Surasak was due to meet the deputy chief-of-staff of the China's army,
Lieutenant-General Wang Guanzhong.

The coup was the latest convulsion in a decade-long conflict between the
Bangkok-based royalist establishment and former Prime Minister Thaksin
Shinawatra and his allies. The ousted government had been headed by the
self-exiled, former telecommunications tycoon's sister, Yingluck Shinawatra.

Several foreign government have voiced disapproval of the coup, including
the United States, which scrapped joint military programmes days after the
generals took power.

In contrast, Thailand's armed forces chief met China's and Vietnam's
ambassadors in Bangkok last week in what the junta said was a show of
support.

On Monday, in the first major corporate deal since the coup, state-owned
China Mobile Ltd agreed to buy a 19 percent stake in Thai telecoms group
True Corp for $881 million.

The Thai regime's engagement with China comes at a critical time for the
United States, which is shoring up ties with Asian allies and building
stronger relationships with countries like Vietnam and Myanmar to counter
China's growing assertiveness.

Perhaps with that over-arching strategy in mind, the U.S. response to
Thailand's coup has, for now anyway, been limited to the suspension of
about $3.5 million in military aid and the cancellation of various training
exercises and visits by commanders.

CLAMP DOWN

For a decade Thailand has been caught up in a political tug of war between
supporters of Thaksin in the north and northeast and middle-class Bangkok
residents aligned with the royalist establishment. Thaksin was ousted in a
2006 coup and has lived abroad since 2008 to avoid a corruption sentence.

He remains hugely popular among rural voters.

The army stepped in after more than six months of debilitating protests
against Yingluck's government saying it had to act to prevent bloodshed.

China's top newspaper on Monday warned against aping Western-style
democracy, pointing to Thailand as an example of the kind of chaos the
system can bring.

As part of the Thai junta's reform plans, it has moved to sideline civil
servants and senior police officers seen as loyal to Thaksin in what his
supporters see as part of a bid by the establishment to permanently exclude
him from politics.

The junta has imposed draconian controls since taking control. More than
300 academics, journalists, activists and politicians, a disproportionate
number of them aligned to Thaksin, have been rounded up by the military.

The junta has also banned political gatherings of more than five people and
imposed a nationwide curfew, now running from midnight to 4 a.m.

However, over the past week, it has lifted the curfew in 10 holiday
destinations to help boost tourism, which accounts for about 10 percent of
the economy. On Tuesday, it lifted it in a further 20 provinces but kept it
in Bangkok.

Chinese tourists have flocked to Thailand in recent years, overtaking the
number of visitors from the United States and Europe though the recent
turmoil has frightened many of them off.

In the first five months of 2014, the number of tourists from China plunged
54.9 percent from the same period a year earlier to 307,637, according to
the Association of Thai Travel Agents).

Chinese tourists, including visitors for business meetings and conferences,
accounted for 26 percent of total passenger arrivals in those months.There
was no respite from the blistering heat in the national capital with the
minimum temperature settling at 31.2 degree Celsius, three notches above
normal.

However, the weatherman has predicted dust storm and thunderstorm tomorrow
with rain on Friday which could bring respite from the heat wave.

The maximum temperature is expected to be around 40 degree Celsius in the
next two days.

According to Met department, the minimum temperature was recorded at 31.2
degree Celsius, which was three notches above normal. Met officials said
that maximum temperature is expected to cross 44 degree Celsius today.

The Met department has predicted a clear sky with no rain or storm for the
day. Yesterday, the maximum temperature was recorded at 45.2 degree
Celsius, which was six notches above normal.a
© Thomson Reuters 2014
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Peace Is Doable

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