
Thailand8217;s parliament elected a brother-in-law of ousted leader Thaksin Shinawatra as prime minister on Wednesday, ensuring continued tension with protesters who accuse the new government of being Thaksin8217;s puppet.
Somchai Wongsawat, a 61-year-old former judge and government bureaucrat married to Thaksin8217;s younger sister, won a clear majority of parliamentary votes as the six-party ruling coalition held firm.
He has been acting prime minister since Samak Sundaravej, whom the People8217;s Alliance for Democracy PAD also accused of being an agent for Thaksin, was sacked by a court last week for hosting TV cooking shows while in office.
Just an hour after being elected, the bespectacled and soft-spoken Somchai called for national reconciliation to end the political crisis that dates back to the PAD8217;s first attacks on Thaksin in late 2005. Their campaign played a major part in the coup that followed in 2006.
It is time for Thailand to reconcile. We do not hate each other, so we should not let hatred prevent us from tackling the immediate problems the country is facing, he told reporters.
His words are likely to fall on deaf ears, with the PAD immediately labelling him a Thaksin nominee and vowing to continue its three-week occupation of the prime minister8217;s official compound.
We really don8217;t care. This is just a group of bandits choosing a new leader, PAD leader Somsak Kosaisuk told reporters. Somchai8217;s wife, one of 111 Thaksin-linked politicians banned from politics for five years after the coup, has been accused of links to dodgy deals at Bangkok8217;s new Suvarnabhumi airport, charges she denies.
However, analysts said that, and his obvious family ties to Thaksin, would provide ammunition for the PAD and opposition Democrat party against a man otherwise seen as bland, inoffensive and lacking in charisma.