More than half of the Thai people disagree with a proposed blanket amnesty for leaders and politicians involved in the 2010 political unrest, according to an academic poll released today.

Bangkok University’s research centre (the Bangkok Poll) said 61.0 per cent of 1,195 respondents in Bangkok and the metropolitan area oppose pardoning hard-core leaders who instigated the months-long rally while 62.7 per cent objected to amnesty for the politicians involved in the upheaval.

UDD reds barricade in Silom district Bangkok
More than half of the Thai people disagree with a proposed blanket amnesty for leaders and politicians involved in the 2010 political unrest

Regarding amnesty for those who joined the demonstrations, 45.4 per cent agreed while 34.2 per cent disagreed.

Asked whether the Amnesty Bill should be promulgated, 55.3 per cent said the bill was for the interest of the powers that be and some political groups, while only 28.7 per cent agreed that the bill was aimed at national reconciliation.

On Thailand’s political future if the Amnesty Bill is passed into law, 41.3 per cent said it would lead to massive protest, 15.1 per cent believed it would bring peace and reconciliation to the nation, and 14.3 per cent said it would alleviate political and social tension.

Asked whether a Democrat-led demonstration against the Amnesty Bill would stop its promulgation, 46.8 per cent did not think so while just 11.6 per cent believed its impact would prevent enforcement of the bill.

On possible violence and related activities from a Democrat-led demonstration, 26.4 per cent predicted road closures and demonstrators’ movements to various locations, 24.4 per cent believed that roads would be closed, that huge numbers of people would join the demonstration which would drag on, and 15 per cent painted a grim picture of cracking down on protesters with force.

Regarding the scale of political differences among the Thai people, Bangkok Poll found that 50.4 per cent ranked the conflicts as high, 24.9 per cent medium, 21.8 per cent extremely high, while only 1.8 per cent and 1.1 per cent ranked the conflicts as low and extremely low in potential respectively.  (MCOT online news)

via Poll indicates public objection to blanket amnesty for politicians | MCOT.net | MCOT.net.

About the author

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Get notified of our weekly selection of news

You May Also Like

The Philippines’ 12th Foreign Investment Negative List: Implications for Foreign Investors

The Philippines’ 12th Regular Foreign Investment Negative List was issued in June…

Thailand to charge 300 bahts tourist tax starting from June

The fee will be cheaper for those arriving by water and land because they are likely to stay in the country for only a few days. Visitors who do not stay overnight, diplomats, and work permit holders will be exempted from the fee.