Thai prime minister to address the nation
Thai Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej planned to address the nation on Sunday on its escalating political crisis after he refused to yield to anti- government protesters who have vowed to besiege his office until he resigns.
The demonstrators continued to occupy the area yesterday around Government House, the seat of Thailand's government, after breaking through a police cordon Friday.
The crisis has escalated over the past three weeks as demonstrators took to the streets against his coalition government, which they claim is a proxy for former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted in a 2006 military coup.
"Our stance is clear, we will continue to protest and camp out here until this puppet government of Thaksin's is out of office," said Suriyasai Katasila, spokesman for the People's Alliance for Democracy movement, which has led the protests.
But deputy government spokesman Natawut Saikau told The Associated Press that Samak "will not bow to demands for him to resign."
"The demand is unreasonable," he said. A no-confidence motion against the government, submitted by the opposition Democrat Party, will be debated in Parliament on Tuesday and Wednesday, said the body's president, Chai Chidchob.
"The People's Alliance for Democracy believes that the government's decision to allow a no-confidence motion in Parliament is a political game to lessen tension. But the decision has come too late," Suriyasai said.
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