The Borneo Post

Thai king takes control of five palace agencies

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BANGKOK: Thailand’s new king was granted control yesterday over five state agencies that oversee royal affairs and security, the latest move by an increasing­ly assertive monarch to consolidat­e power.

The law detailing the transfers was not made public until it was published late Monday in the Royal Gazette, meaning lawmakers had voted on the bill in private.

That secrecy is in line with the trademark opacity of Thailand’s monarchy, a powerful institutio­n shielded by harsh defamation laws that for decades have landed critics behind bars.

The five agencies transferre­d to King Maha Vajiralong­korn’s cont rol include two major administra­tive department­s — the Royal Household Bureau and the Office of His Majesty’s Principal Private Secretary — plus three palace security agencies.

All were previously under government or military control.

“( These) are agencies that handle work related to His Majesty the King and royal family members’ business, and they need to follow traditiona­l procedures,” said the law which came into effect yesterday.

“The work is different than other department­s so it is suitable to set up new agencies under His Majesty’s custody.”

Vajiralong­korn, 64, ascended the throne after the October death of his revered father Bhumibol Adulyadej.

It was the country’s first royal succession in 70 years, stirring anxiety among powerbroke­rs about how a new monarch might restructur­e relations between the palace and figures in military and government.

Whi le the king’s formal powers are limited under the constituti­onal monarchy, the throne became a position of vast influence and wealth under Bhumibol.

Vajiralong­korn has yet to attain his father’s level of popularity and his approach to the crown is still largely a mystery.

Yet the new king has taken a number of assertive moves in recent months to expand his influence.

Earlier this year, he ordered changes to a junt a- draf ted constituti­on that had already been approved in a referendum.

The changes gave him control over the naming of a regent and kept open the possibilit­y of a palace interventi­on in case of political deadlock.

Vajiralong­korn was also granted power last year to appoint the kingdom’s top monk, a position that had been left open for years amid a bitter power struggle between Buddhist factions.

Since ascending the throne the new monarch has sacked a number of powerful palace officials from his father’s era. Some were publicly accused of “evil deeds” and paraded in front of the press with their heads shaved. — AFP

(These) are agencies that handle work related to His Majesty the King and royal family members’ business, and they need to follow traditiona­l procedures. The law

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