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The timing of the dissolution has been a crucial issue because a key reshuffle of top military posts scheduled for September. It's not clear if a caretaker government, which would run the country after Parliament is dissolved, would be allowed to make the appointments. Protest leaders say Abhisit's proposal is too vague and they need clarity. On Wednesday, Thais put aside their political animosity to honor the country's ailing monarch on the 60th anniversary of his coronation, and his rare public appearance inspired thousands lining the streets to chant "Long Live the King!" The highly revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej emerged in a wheelchair from a Bangkok hospital to preside over the ceremonies. The 82-year-old king, the world's longest reigning monarch, has been hospitalized for the past nine months with what the palace initially described as a lung inflammation. The monarch made no comment on the political stalemate. Many Thais had hoped the king, who ascended the throne in 1946 but was officially crowned on May 5, 1950, might broker a peaceful solution to the crisis, as he did in 1973 when he stopped bloodshed during a student uprising and again in 1992 during antimilitary street protests. The protest group includes supporters of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra who was ousted in a 2006 military coup following accusations of corruption and abuse of power.
[Associated
Press;
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