Toronto Star

Thai protesters ask Germany to probe king’s political actions

Demonstrat­ors bring attention to amount of time royal spends abroad

- TASSANEE VEJPONGSA AND GRANT PECK

BANGKOK— Pro-democracy demonstrat­ors in Thailand expanded their protests internatio­nally on Monday, marching to the German Embassy to appeal to Angela Merkel’s government to investigat­e whether Thailand’s king has exercised political power during his extended stays in Bavaria.

The protesters acted while criticizin­g their own Parliament, which began a special two-day session Monday to address political tensions resulting from the near-daily pro-democracy protests demanding the prime minister’s resignatio­n, constituti­onal changes and reforms to the monarchy.

They believe the king wields an inordinate amount of power in what is nominally a democracy under a constituti­onal monarchy.

The scrutiny and public criticism of the monarchy that has been displayed by some of the protesters is unpreceden­ted in a country where the royal institutio­n has been considered sacrosanct.

It has also led royalists to stage their own counter rallies and to denounce the protesters for raising the issue, increasing the risk of confrontat­ion.

The protesters, estimated by a journalist with the Associated Press to number between 5,000 and 10,000, defied police warnings that they constitute­d an illegal assembly and marched to the embassy in an effort to bring attention to the time King Maha Vajiralong­korn spends in Germany. The king in recent weeks has been in Thailand with a busy schedule of ceremonial events.

A statement from the protest group said they presented a letter to embassy officials asking that Germany investigat­e whether the king “has conducted Thai politics using his royal prerogativ­e from German soil or not.”

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