ID :
186703
Mon, 06/06/2011 - 14:34
Auther :
Shortlink :
http://m.oananews.org//node/186703
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"Yingluck" vows to create national reconciliation

NONG KHAI, June 6 (TNA) - Pheu Thai Party top-list candidate Yingluck Shinawatra vowed on Monday to create national reconciliation if she was elected Thailand's first female prime minister in the forthcoming national poll, set on July 3.
Yingluck, who is the youngest sister of exiled ex-Thai premier Thaksin Shinawatra, announced the policy when she and Pheu Thai Party chief advisor Police General Pracha Promnok led the Pheu Thai team to campaign for votes in the country's northeastern Nong Khai Province.
The 43-year-old leading Thai business woman-turned politician insisted that her Pheu Thai Party is also determined to solve people's problems and is presenting the clear policy to all sectors in the Thai society, including the military, calling on Royal Thai Armed Forces leaders to allow her and her Pheu Thai team to launch electoral campaigns in military barracks where she will describe the Pheu Thai Party's position and policies in details. Earlier, the military rejected the Pheu Thai Party's request to campaign for votes in Royal Thai Armed Forces units.
In response to the rival Democrat Party's allegations over her Pheu Thai Party's four-step tactics toward a political amnesty for Thaksin and her involvement in Thaksin's concealment of the Shinawatra family' business stakes, Yingluck said that she is ready to clarify all alleged points and to be probed under the rule of laws, and that a political amnesty for Thaksin, if approved, should benefit not only the convicted ex-premier, but the majority of the Thai people.
Meanwhile, a Buddhist monk predicted when Yingluck visited a temple in Nong Khai that she would become the first female Thai prime minister, advising her to carry on campaigning for votes without paying attention to allegations to gain public sympathy, instead.
Yingluck is scheduled to continue campaigning for votes in nearby Bueng Kan and Nakhon Phanom Provinces later in the day. (TNA)
Yingluck, who is the youngest sister of exiled ex-Thai premier Thaksin Shinawatra, announced the policy when she and Pheu Thai Party chief advisor Police General Pracha Promnok led the Pheu Thai team to campaign for votes in the country's northeastern Nong Khai Province.
The 43-year-old leading Thai business woman-turned politician insisted that her Pheu Thai Party is also determined to solve people's problems and is presenting the clear policy to all sectors in the Thai society, including the military, calling on Royal Thai Armed Forces leaders to allow her and her Pheu Thai team to launch electoral campaigns in military barracks where she will describe the Pheu Thai Party's position and policies in details. Earlier, the military rejected the Pheu Thai Party's request to campaign for votes in Royal Thai Armed Forces units.
In response to the rival Democrat Party's allegations over her Pheu Thai Party's four-step tactics toward a political amnesty for Thaksin and her involvement in Thaksin's concealment of the Shinawatra family' business stakes, Yingluck said that she is ready to clarify all alleged points and to be probed under the rule of laws, and that a political amnesty for Thaksin, if approved, should benefit not only the convicted ex-premier, but the majority of the Thai people.
Meanwhile, a Buddhist monk predicted when Yingluck visited a temple in Nong Khai that she would become the first female Thai prime minister, advising her to carry on campaigning for votes without paying attention to allegations to gain public sympathy, instead.
Yingluck is scheduled to continue campaigning for votes in nearby Bueng Kan and Nakhon Phanom Provinces later in the day. (TNA)