After weeks of confrontation and compromise, the peace is to stay in the air. No one holds their breath, but the scene in Bangkok yesterday abruptly when the government proposed a dramatic peace plan, trying to bring the reconciliation of the nation and stop standing in the city, which rapidly approaching two months duration. Favoured by seizing the momentum again after the disastrous Red Shirts stormed Chulalongkorn Hospital a few days ago, Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajivacaught everyone on the back foot when he threw yesterday a "road map" to peace, and offered the elections on 14 November. The plan was like a bolt from the blue, it was completely unexpected, but had a few minutes on the approach taken by all sides. The United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship (UDD), the broad umbrella of the "Red Shirts" was quick - but careful - ready to support the basics of the plan, such as the heterogeneous group are anxious to vote forTo see if it was pushed too far into the corner. The ambitious "road map" has five main points: first, to respect and respect for the monarchy, the second sweep away social injustice in the country, thirdly, a fair and balanced media to ensure fourth, to an acceptable investigation of the fatal events, the organization develops in the last few weeks, and finally the country's creaking political system is revised, especially the revision of the constitution until it is a set of principles...
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