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Top Thai court bans ruling party | Top Thai court bans ruling party |
(40 minutes later) | |
Thailand's constitutional court has dissolved the governing People Power Party and two of its coalition partners for fraud during the last election. | |
The parties' leaders, including Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat, were banned from politics for five years. | |
But under the constitution, most of its MPs can keep their seats under another party name, and should be able to form another government, correspondents say. | |
Earlier, an anti-government protester was killed at a Bangkok airport. | Earlier, an anti-government protester was killed at a Bangkok airport. |
Local television reported that a grenade had been fired at Don Mueang airport, the capital's domestic hub, which has been occupied by the anti-government People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) since last week. | |
PAD supporters accuse Mr Somchai's adminstration of being corrupt and hostile to the much-revered monarchy, and wants the entire government to resign. | |
They also accuse Mr Somchai of being a proxy of his brother-in-law, exiled former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra. | |
'Political standard' | |
Earlier on Tuesday, a protest by hundreds of red-shirted government supporters forced the constitutional court to move its final hearing to Bangkok's administrative courthouse. | |
After fewer than three hours in session, the head of the nine-judge panel, Chat Chonlaworn, announced that the court had found the People Power Party (PPP), the Machima Thipatai party and the Chart Thai party guilty of vote-buying, and unanimously agreed to disband them. | |
On Monday, Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat said he would not resign | |
Dozens of the PPP's executive members, including Mr Somchai, were also found guilty of personal involvement and banned from politics for five years. | |
Judge Chat said that he hoped the ruling would "set a political standard". | |
Outside the court, where a large crowd of pro-government activists had gathered after learning of the relocation, there was a furious reaction. | |
Prime Minister Somchai's supporters accused the judges of sabotaging democracy and going against the people's will. | |
Despite the presence of a large number of riot police, the protesters soon blocked all access to the building and vowed not to let the judges out. | |
One former minister said members of the PPP who had escaped the political ban imposed on its leaders would regroup and form another coalition government. | |
"The verdict comes as no surprise to all of us," Jakrapob Penkair told the Reuters news agency. "But our members are determined to move on, and we will form a government again out of the majority that we believe we still have." | |
The BBC's Jonathan Head, outside the courthouse, says the court's ruling will provoke anger right throughout the heartland of the government's supporters in the north and north-east. | |
On Monday, the prime minister insisted he would not step down. | |
"I will not quit and I will not dissolve parliament," he told reporters in the northern city of Chiang Mai. |