Oman Daily Observer

Panel moves to dissolve party linked to princess

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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”.

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.

 ?? — AFP ?? An armed Thai soldier guards a check point while a family on a motorbike pass by following a roadside bomb attack by suspected militants in Ra-ngae district in Thailand’s restive southern province of Narathiwat on Wednesday.
— AFP An armed Thai soldier guards a check point while a family on a motorbike pass by following a roadside bomb attack by suspected militants in Ra-ngae district in Thailand’s restive southern province of Narathiwat on Wednesday.

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