Abhisit Vejaijiva and Yingluck Shinawatra are the governments of Thailand. The only State actor involved in the conflict. At the start of the conflict, it adopted a basically passive policy, which in Thailand has been summed up by the expression of never mind, which describe the main characteristic of the Thai people. In May, the government gave the Red Shirts leaders the so-called Road Map for National Reconciliation, along with a promise to dissolve parliament on September 2010 and hold a general election on November. While the road map was initially accepted by the red leaders, much to everyone's surprise and perhaps pressured by the most hard-line sector linked to former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, they presented new demands for abandoning their camp in the centre of Bangkok. The democratic government replied with an ultimatum which, under the silence of the Red Shirts, culminated in the military intrusion of 19 May. There are presently 61 members and followers of the red movement serving prison sentences in Thailand for various crimes due to the 2010 disturbances. Some are on parole, while others are still awaiting trial. Their support was a key factor for bringing Yingluck Shinawatra to power. In this regard, the fact that in January 2012, he approved certain compensatory measures for the victims, who are activists and followers of the Red Shirts, of the political protests that have occurred since 2006. The opposition reproaches the discrimination of his not having approved a similar package for all victims of the confrontations that took place in Tak Bai and Krue Sue, in Southern Thailand, during Thaksin Shinawatra's commission.