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British foreign secretary urges Thailand to uphold democracy


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British foreign secretary urges Thailand to uphold democracy

JAKARTA: -- British Foreign Secretary William Hague on Wednesday urged Thailand to uphold democracy as political violence escalated ahead of an election.

"It’s important that constitutional democracy is upheld," Hague said in Jakarta after talks with his Indonesian counterpart Marty Natalegawa.

"This is a matter for the people of Thailand, but I hope their political leaders will find a way forward," he said.

Opponents of Thailand’s caretaker Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra have staged protests since early November to demand her resignation.

Ten people have been killed and more than 570 injured in politically related violence.

Protesters have occupied several key intersections in Bangkok since January 13 in an attempt to scuttle an election scheduled for Sunday.

The poll is expected to return the incumbent Pheu Thai Party to power.

Hague also expressed concerns about tensions between China, Japan and South Korea over disputed islands in the East China Sea.

"Recent tensions in North-East Asia are of course a concern," he said. "We discussed the importance of a rule-based approach to addressing the dispute."

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-- The Nation 2014-01-29

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"This is a matter for the people of Thailand, but I hope their political leaders will find a way forward," he said.

Can't see anything wrong with what he said.

A good and sensible statement from the British foreign secretary.

May be he failed as PM....but he is doing a good job now.

Agree he said nothing wrong. However, he was never PM. He was opposition leader when Tony Blair was practically unbeatable.

He would make a good PM now, pity Thailand don't have many politicians of his caliber.

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The devil is always in the detail.

Note the plural use: Leaders - clearly suggesting some form of dialogue between the representatives of all parts of Thai society is a fundamental part of the solution.

He didn't support the election as clearly as he supported democracy

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"This is a matter for the people of Thailand, but I hope their political leaders will find a way forward," he said.

Can't see anything wrong with what he said.

A good and sensible statement from the British foreign secretary.

May be he failed as PM....but he is doing a good job now.

Agree he said nothing wrong. However, he was never PM. He was opposition leader when Tony Blair was practically unbeatable.

He would make a good PM now, pity Thailand don't have many politicians of his caliber.

Hahaha - Hague is a failed politician Governing with a party with a 27% mandate - learn about you own country PLEASE before instructing ours!

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Want to see if we get the same "mind your own business, solve your own problems at home" comments. whistling.gif

Farang don't quite understand Thais.

It is not that Thais do not want election.

The majority people want election after reform.

You are correct. This farang doesn't understand how your response was, in any way, relevant to my comment.

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People like Hague should stick to sorting out the mess that they have created in their own country as opposed to poking their nose into other countries business. Of course Hague comes from a party with a long tradition of supporting dictators and is currently a ruling party that has no real clear mandate to govern, if we were to listen to the arguments of our Red Shirt sympathizers on here, who overthrew a democratically elected coalition preciously.

Just for recollection purposes

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Facepalm...wai2.gifblink.png there will not be any elections in any of our lifetimes if we have to wait for reform...and no one has delineated what/which reform must in fact be implemented first... corruption...gonna take a lot of time... and money>? cheesy.gif we'll never see another election here then.. Game over..everybody go home wai2.gif

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Want to see if we get the same "mind your own business, solve your own problems at home" comments. whistling.gif

Farang don't quite understand Thais.

It is not that Thais do not want election.

The majority people want election after reform.

But don't you think that the people should have a say in those reforms? Having a dictatorship make reforms for all the people of Thailand does not seem to be very democratic.

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