泰軍方兩周交權 市民平靜接受國內政變 [ 2006-09-21 10:37 ]
當地時間9月19日夜里,泰國軍方發(fā)動軍事政變。9月20日,發(fā)動政變的領導人、泰國陸軍司令頌提表示,軍方無意統(tǒng)治國家,泰國將在兩周內成立一個文官政府,任命一位新總理。據悉,看到街頭出現的大量士兵和坦克,泰國曼谷的民眾并沒有因此陷入恐慌,他們似乎平靜接受了這一切。 |
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Thailand's Army
Commander-in-Chief Gen. Sondhi Boonyaratkalin listens to a
reporter's questions in Bangkok Wednesday, Sept. 20, 2006.
[AP] | Bangkon, Thailand - Thailand's
new military ruler, winning crucial royal backing for his bloodless coup, announced Wednesday that he
would not call elections for another year. The US and other Western
nations expressed disapproval and urged a swift restoration of
democracy.
Army commander Gen. Sondhi Boonyaratkalin, appearing
relaxed and confident in his military uniform at his first news conference
since seizing power Tuesday night, said he would serve as de facto
prime minister for two weeks until the junta, which calls itself the Council of
Administrative Reform, chooses a civilian to replace him and drafts an
interim
constitution .
Sondhi sealed the success of his coup by receiving royal endorsement as
leader of the new junta, while ousted Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra,
who watched events unfold from abroad, pondered his future and the threat
of possible prosecution at home.
Receiving the imprimatur of
revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej legitimizes the takeover, and should
effectively quash any efforts at resistance by Thaksin's partisans.
Thaksin's ouster followed a series of missteps that prompted many to
accuse the prime minister of challenging the king's authority, an
unpardonable act in this traditional Southeast Asian nation that is a
popular vacation destination for Westerners.
There appeared to be a sense of relief among many Thais at the
resolution of political tensions that had hung over the nation since the
beginning of the year, when street demonstrations demanding Thaksin step
down for alleged corruption and abuse of power gained momentum. Thailand
has had no working legislature and only a caretaker government since
February, when Thaksin dissolved parliament to hold new elections in an
effort to reaffirm his mandate.
The presence of tanks and armed soldiers on the streets of Bangkok, a
city of more than 10 million, was taken with good humor in an almost
holiday atmosphere. Schools, government offices and the stock market were
closed Wednesday but were to reopen Thursday.
Outside Thailand, the coup drew criticism from several foreign
governments and human rights groups, who expressed dismay at the overthrow
of a popularly elected government.
The Bush administration denounced the coup and hinted that US aid,
military cooperation and improved trade relations might be in jeopardy.
(Agencies) |
Vocabulary:
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bloodless coup:
不流血政變
junta: 政變后上臺的軍政府
interim
constitution: 臨時憲法
imprimatur:
許可、認可
mandate:
統(tǒng)治權,管轄權
(英語點津陳蓓編輯)
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