Thai Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha (L) and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe shake hands prior to their meeting at Abe's official residence in Tokyo on Feb 9 2015. Prayut is on a three-day visit to Japan. (AFP/POOL/FRANCK ROBICHON) |
TOKYO: Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on Monday (Feb 9) urged Thailand's military rulers to return as soon as possible to civilian rule as he met his counterpart and former army chief Prayut Chan-O-Cha in Tokyo.
The Thai junta chief is in Tokyo after receiving his first invitation from a G7 country since the coup in May, which took place days after democratically elected prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra was ousted by a court ruling following months of street protests.
"Prime Minister Prayut is making his best effort to recover democracy in Thailand," Abe told a joint press conference. "Japan expresses its strong expectations for Thailand's national reconciliation and a return of civilian rule as early as possible."
Prayut said Thailand would speed up action towards the creation of a new constitution. "We plan to hold elections in the end of this year or the beginning of the next year," he said. "I promise I will build a healthy democracy in Thailand."
The two sides signed a memorandum on cooperation over railway development in Thailand, while "affirming the importance" of promoting the Dawei special economic zone project involving Japan, Thailand and Myanmar, a joint statement said.
Dawei is a multi-billion-dollar seaport project on Myanmar's south coast, which would give Thailand a gateway to the Indian Ocean and Western markets.
The visit by Prayut came as China is openly courting Thailand's generals and as strains are begining to show between the kingdom and its traditional ally the United States following last year's coup. Washington has been critical of the generals' power grab, calling for the return of civilian rule.
China has also backed the construction on a US$12 billion railway from northern Nong Khai province - which borders Laos - to the vast coastal industrial estate of Map Ta Phut southeast of Bangkok. China hopes the 734-kilometre railway will eventually link its southwestern city of Kunming with Asia's second busiest port of Singapore.
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