BANGKOK: Thailand’s capital braced on Sunday for possible unrest in the week ahead, with street protests expected over moves in parliament that could eventually lead to a pardon for ousted Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra. As many as 2,000 protesters calling themselves the People’s Army Against the Thaksin Regime turned up for a peaceful rally in a Bangkok park.

But bigger and more militant protests are expected when parliament on Wednesday begins debating an amnesty bill that would cover people arrested for political activities since the 2006 military coup that ousted Thaksin for alleged corruption and disrespect to the monarchy.

Thaksin was later sentenced to two years in jail on a conflict of interest charge, but escaped punishment by living abroad in self-imposed exile. The amnesty bill would not cover Thaksin, but his opponents fear that if it passes, it would set a precedent and pave the way for another measure pardoning him.

The bill was proposed by a lawmaker from the ruling Pheu Thai Party, which is headed by Thaksin’s sister, Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra.

The unease caused by the spectre of protests reflects Thailand’s failure to achieve political reconciliation after the coup, with Thaksin’s supporters and opponents battling for power since his ouster. In 2010, about 90 people were killed when Thaksin’s supporters occupied part of downtown Bangkok for around two months before being swept away by the army.

In 2008, Thaksin’s opponents occupied the prime minister’s offices for about three months and Bangkok’s two airports for a week. Thaksin is a highly polarising figure who won large majorities in winning office, especially from rural voters who gained from his populist policies. Critics accused him of corruption and abuse of power, charging he was imposing a “parliamentary dictatorship” and trying to usurp King Bhumibol Adulyadej’s constitutional authority.

Even though Thaksin’s political allies currently lead the government, they have not been able to push through measures allowing for his free return, thanks largely to opposition by royalists and the military. While it is not clear how many protesters the opposition can muster, Yingluck’s government is taking few chances.

This past week, it invoked the Internal Security Act in three Bangkok districts, citing the possibility of protest violence, and readied more than 30,000 police officers to provide safety at key locations, including the prime minister’s office compound and parliament.

The act, in effect from Aug 1-10, authorises officials to seal off roads, take action against security threats, impose curfews and ban the use of electronic devices in designated areas. Peaceful and unarmed rallies are allowed under the law.

“We will take care of the protesters and will make sure ordinary people can commute and carry on their daily lives,” Yingluck said during her weekly television talk show, aired on Saturday morning.

“I hope under these circumstances, we can get through the situation smoothly.” Sunday’s protest, held in a part of Bangkok far from government offices, was low-key. The so-called People’s Army is a fringe group, nominally led by former senior military officers with close ties to the country’s royalist establishment.

It has little of the organising skill or appeal of the People’s Alliance for Democracy, which led large-scale and effective anti-Thaksin protests before the coup in 2006, and again in 2008, when another pro-Thaksin government was in power.

The alliance has not committed itself to taking part in the current round of protests. One of the People’s Army co-leaders, Banawit Kengrian, said on Sunday that his protesters would stay overnight and remain as long as needed, adding that he wanted matters to end in seven days.—AP

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