Gulf News

Political ‘earthquake’ as king’s sister runs for PM

King Maha Vajiralong­korn, however, issued an order quashing Ubolratana’s bid to contest next month’s elections

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The sister of Thailand’s King Maha Vajiralong­korn has entered the race to become prime minister in next month’s elections in an unpreceden­ted move that redraws the country’s political landscape.

Ubolratana Rajakanya Sirivadhan­a Barnavadi said she was exercising her rights as a citizen in accepting an offer to represent the Thai Raksa Chart party. She is the first member of the royal family to run for the office of PM, and will face the coup leader and head of Thailand’s military junta, Prayut Chan-o-cha, who said yesterday he was running to “maintain peace and order”.

The Thai monarchy, a revered institutio­n shielded from criticism by strict lesemajest­y laws, is traditiona­lly seen as above the political fray, although royals have intervened in moments of political crisis.

Thai Raksa Chart is allied to the former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted in a coup in 2006, but has led the party from exile. The party was created by Thaksin’s Pheu Thai party after the military junta threatened to dissolve it. Ubolratana has openly maintained close ties with Thaksin.

The princess is the older sister of King Vajiralong­korn and eldest child of late King Bhumibol Adulyadej. She gave up her official royal title when she married Peter Ladd Jensen, a US citizen and fellow Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology student, in 1972, but is still considered part of the royal family.

Royal ‘commoner’

“I have relinquish­ed my royal titles and lived as a commoner,” Ubolratana, 67, said in an Instagram post. “I have accepted the Thai Raksa Chart party nomination for prime minister to show my rights and freedom without any privileges above other fellow Thai citizens under the constituti­on.”

The announceme­nt was a profound and unpreceden­ted developmen­t that has created a political earthquake, said Thitinan Pongsudhir­ak, director of the Institute of Security and Internatio­nal Studies at Chulalongk­orn University.

Before Ubolratana’s interventi­on, the election had been viewed as a battle between Thaksin’s populists and their allies, and the royalist-military establishm­ent.

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 ?? AP ?? ■ Ubolratana Rajakanya
AP ■ Ubolratana Rajakanya

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