The powerful army chief General Prayuth Chan-ocha announced the military takeover in a stunning statement broadcast on national television.
The move tiggered international condemnation, with the US, EU, France and others expressing deep concern over the developments.
There was no immediate sign of soldiers patrolling central Bangkok, but troops dispersed the two protest sites where competing groups were camped out — one backing the ousted government and one that had struggled for six months to unseat it. There were no signs of resistance or reports of violence.
Secretary of State John Kerry urged the restoration of civilian rule, media freedoms and “early elections that reflect the will of the people”, while the Pentagon said it was reviewing military cooperation with its longtime Southeast Asian ally.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon was “seriously concerned” by the coup, his spokesman said, and urged a return to “constitutional, civilian, democratic rule”.
Flanked by the heads of the armed forces, General Prayuth said the coup was launched “to quickly bring the situation back to normal, to let the people have love and unity as in the past, and to reform the political and economic systems — and to grant equality to every side.”
An army spokesman later announced that it had dissolved the caretaker government and suspended the constitution, but said the Senate would remain in place.
The pivotal developments came after General Prayuth declared martial law on Tuesday, in what he called a bid to resolve the crisis.
Shortly before the coup announcement was made, armed soldiers in military vehicles surrounded the military facility where the politicians were meeting, apparently to block those inside from leaving.
Many of the country’s highest-profile figures were summoned for the meeting. They included the acting prime minister — who sent four Cabinet ministers in his place — and anti-government protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban, as well as Suthep’s rival from the pro-government Red Shirt group, Jatuporn Prompan.
A government official, Paradorn Pattanathabutr, contacted shortly after the coup announcement said that the four ministers attending the meeting were still being held by the military.
“The rest of us who are outside are still fine and in the safe places.
“However, the situation is very worrying. We have to monitor it closely and don’t know what else can happen,” he said.
Political instability
The overthrow caps months of increasing political tension, pitting a Bangkok-based royalist elite and its backers against the democratically elected government aligned to Thaksin, whose sister Yingluck was dismissed as premier earlier this month in a controversial court ruling.
The latest round of unrest started in November, when demonstrators took to the streets to try to force Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra to step down.
They accused her of being a proxy for her popular billionaire brother, former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted in a 2006 military coup and now lives in self-imposed exile to avoid a jail sentence on a corruption conviction.
The coup announced Thursday was the 12th since the country’s absolute monarchy ended in 1932.
The military was widely viewed as sympathetic to the protesters seeking to oust the current government.
The tough-talking General Prayut said he seized power because of “the violence in Bangkok and many parts of the country that resulted in loss of innocent lives and property and was likely to escalate.”
“We ask the public not to panic and to carry on their lives normally,” General Prayuth said. “And civil servants stay in every ministry, carry on your responsibilities as normal.”
The army chief said that the military would “provide protection” for foreigners in Thailand.
General Prayuth invoked the military’s expanded powers on Tuesday and issued more than a dozen edicts that included moves to muzzle the media, the internet and vaguely defined threats to prosecute opponents.
At the time, the military had insisted it was not seizing power, but the move prompted widespread speculation in Thailand of an imminent coup.
Some experts expressed fears the military takeover could unleash more turmoil.
“The coup is not a solution at all to end the crisis. This will become the crisis,” said Pavin Chachavalpongpun of the Centre for Southeast Asian Studies at Japan’s Kyoto University.
“It shows the military has never learned the lesson from 2006,” he said, referring to the cycle of political crisis stemming from Thaksin’s overthrow.
Mr Pavin said the coup would make anti-government protesters “very happy”.
Protests by the anti-Thaksin movement have rocked Thailand for months. Related violence has left at least 28 people dead and hundreds wounded.
“Since the caretaker government was resisting moving to an ad hoc prime minister, Prayut was pressured to take the 2006 option,” he said.
The English-language newspaper The Bangkok Post ran a commentary Thursday titled “Coup or No Coup, Task Ahead Is Huge.’’
The column questioned the military’s intentions and its stated goal of imposing martial law to bring about a democratic solution.
“At this stage, the people realise they have no choice but to place their trust in the army chief.’’
Suthep’s anti-government movement, which started in November, had blocked elections and vowed to overthrow the Thai government.
Thousands of his supporters were gathered in Bangkok’s historic district near the prime minister’s office compound, which has been vacant for months due to security concerns.
The pro-Thaksin “Red Shirt” movement had called for new national polls they hope will provide a fresh mandate to the beleaguered elected government.
Arnusit Chenruk, a 39-year-old Bangkok office worker, said the coup was a “good” thing.
“Our country has been chaotic and has had no solutions for a long time.”
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