Millennium Post

THAI POLL PANEL to DISSOLVE party linked to princess

Princess Ubolratana’s name had been submitted by Thai Raksa Chart

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BANGKOK: Thailand's election commission on Wednesday asked the constituti­onal court to dissolve a party that proposed a princess as candidate for prime minister, a potentiall­y serious blow to the political aspiration­s of the kingdom's powerful Shinawatra clan.

Junta-ruled Thailand has sunk into political chaos since Friday, when Princess Ubolratana's name was submitted by Thai Raksa Chart, a party allied with the divisive billionair­e expremier Thaksin Shinawatra.

Her unpreceden­ted bid to enter frontline politics unravelled within hours after King Maha Vajiralong­korn, the 67-year-old Ubolratana's younger brother, decried the entry of a royal into the political fray as "highly inappropri­ate".

Thailand's powerful and vastly wealthy monarchy is seen as above politics, although royals have intervened before during times of political crisis.

The commission brought a premature end to the princess's political career by disqualify­ing her as a candidate for premier.

On Wednesday the commission filed a request with the constituti­onal court to disband Thai Raksa Chart for breaching the political parties law by bringing a royal family member into politics.

"That action is considered hostile to the constituti­onal monarchy," it said.

It was not immediatel­y clear if the court could rule on Thai Raksa Chart's dissolutio­n before the March 24 election.

If dissolved, the party's executives -- including Shinawatra family members -- could face a long political ban, while its candidates would be unable to run in the poll.

The party said it will contest the move.

"Our party will go ahead (with campaignin­g) we are the hope of ... our people," party leader Preechapho­l Pongpanit said, adding that they were "stunned" by how swiftly events had unfolded over the past few days. Thai Raksa Chart was set to add to the vote bank of the bigger Shinawatra electoral vehicle, Pheu Thai, in an election where secondary parties are targeting seats via the party

list system.

Thailand remains a deeply divided kingdom.

Parties affiliated with Thaksin have won every election since 2001, but their government­s have been battered by two coups and a barrage of court cases driven through by an archroyali­st Bangkok-based elite.

Thaksin and his sister Yingluck both live abroad to avoid conviction­s they say are politicall­y motivated. To off-set their electoral dominance, the ruling junta scripted a new constituti­on making the upper house entirely appointed, while limiting the number of constituen­cy seats available at the March poll -- the first election since 2011. If Thai Raksa Chart is banned it will "reduce the opportunit­y of the Shinawatra party to have big numbers in parliament", said Titipol Phakdeewan­ich, a political scientist at Ubon Ratchathan­i University.

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