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Thousands pray for Thai king as markets recover

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1 of 2. Well-wishers pray for the fast recovery of King Bhumibol Adulyadej as they looks up at the building where the king residing, at Siriraj Hospital in Bangkok October 15, 2009. The health of Thailand's king is improving but he needs time-consuming physical therapy, a palace official said on Thursday after concerns over his health sparked a second day of foreign selling in Thailand's financial markets.

Credit: Reuters/Chaiwat Subprasom

BANGKOK | Fri Oct 16, 2009 10:41am EDT

BANGKOK (Reuters) - Thousands arrived in buses to pray outside a Bangkok hospital on Friday for the swift recovery of Thai King Bhumibol Adulyadej, a day after concerns about his health sparked the biggest slide in a year in Thai stock prices.

As Thais queued up to sign get-well books at Siriraj Hospital, where the world's longest-reigning monarch has spent the past 27 days, investors returned to Thailand's bourse, lured by bargains in a market that has jumped more than 50 percent this year. Thai stocks ended the day up 3.5 percent.

The king's youngest daughter, Princess Chulabhorn, on Friday said his condition was improving and he was not in danger.

"He needs to continue staying in hospital, but doctors say there is no danger," the princess told Thai students based in Germany in comments broadcast on Thai television.

Her comments were the first by a royal family member since the king was hospitalized on September 19, and follow weeks of opaquely worded updates from the palace.

"His condition has greatly improved. What he only needs now is physical therapy to help him walk better, to strengthen his leg muscles," she said.

Finance Minister Korn Chatikavanij on Friday urged the public to disregard market rumors and attributed a 7 percent slide in the stock market on Wednesday and Thursday to foreigners cashing in after gains.

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva said the government's Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) had decided on Friday to pursue legal action against anyone found responsible for rumors that triggered the stocks plunge.

Investors remain on edge despite assurances from policymakers and the palace itself that the 81-year-old monarch is on the mend after a bout of pneumonia. Dutch broker ING advised clients on Friday to avoid Thai assets altogether.

Strict lese majeste laws in Thailand make comment on royal matters risky. But the king's disappearance from public view has raised concern in largely Buddhist Thailand where many of his subjects regard him as almost divine.

UNIFYING FIGURE

The health of the king, Thailand's single unifying figure during a long series of military coups and constitutional experiments, is followed closely in financial markets.

Bhumibol's son and presumed heir, 57-year-old, foreign-educated Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn, does not yet command his father's popular support, raising concerns about succession in the influential Thai monarchy.

A focus on the issue of royal succession would add another element of uncertainty to a polarizing four-year political crisis that has already hurt foreign investment in Southeast Asia's second-biggest economy.

In a vivid reminder of that crisis, thousands of red-shirted, anti-government protesters plan to gather in Bangkok on Saturday to demand the government submit a petition seeking a royal pardon for fugitive former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra.

They hope clemency by the king would lead to his political return. Though a constitutional monarch seen as above politics, the king's influence over policy is seen as critical. Most analysts, however, doubt a pardon would be granted.

But for many Thais, the king's appeal is far simpler.

He is revered as the father of the nation and the longest-reigning monarch in Thai history, a figure of unassailable moral authority after decades of criss-crossing Thailand helping his subjects, especially the rural poor. At Siriraj Hospital, more than 10,000 Thais each day come to sign their name in get-well books or lay garlands to pray for a speedy recovery. Since he was admitted, 573,360 people have signed the get-well books.

"Last night, I dreamed of the king and today I came here to pray for him," said Surin Namphosu, 58, from Sumut Prakan province, 127 km (79 miles) east of Bangkok, who is partially paralyzed and needed help to write her name.

Many well-wishers wear white, a lay Buddhist symbol.

"I'm looking for the king and any sign that shows he is getting better," said Janyawat Uttathip, 41, as she looked up to the hospital's 16th floor were the king stays.

"I listen to news about him all the time and feel relief when I hear that his health is in good condition. Being Thai, I always uphold the beloved king," she added. (Editing by Martin Petty and Alex Richardson)

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