The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Four years after coup, Thai junta boss not relinquish­ing his grip on power

- By Denis D. Gray

BANGKOK — When Prayuth Chan-Ocha seized control of Thailand in a military coup, he vigorously denounced politician­s as responsibl­e for the country’s ills and positioned himself and his fellow generals as the cure.

Four years on, with many of the country’s problems still festering and the public growing impatient for long-delayed elections, the junta leader made a declaratio­n that for many seemed to confirm suspicions that he planned to stay in power long past any polls.

“I am no longer a soldier. Understand? I’m just a politician who used to be a soldier,” the 63-year-old former-army-chief-turned-primeminis­ter told reporters at the turn of the year, adding, “But I still have a soldier’s traits.”

The world’s only nation still under formal military rule, Thailand is under increasing pressure both at home and abroad to return to civilian governance. The message now appears clear: In one form or another, the gruff general wants to be that civilian.

Should Prayuth decide to stay on, there’s little stopping him. For one, he still holds absolute power under rules he implemente­d when he staged the 2014 coup and he could simply put off elections yet again.

But even if he decides to follow his latest timeline and hold polls later this year, he and his junta have carefully crafted a strategy to ensure the military commands politics, society and even the economy for decades to come.

While Prayuth has not flatly stated whether he will seek to lead the next government, several days after declaring himself a politician he remarked: “I can be whatever you want me to be. I can be it all.”

Thailand has suffered more than a decade of political unrest and upheaval, including two coups and numerous rounds of sometimes deadly street protests, as its conservati­ve establishm­ent struggled with the grassroots political success of billionair­e businessma­n Thaksin Shinawatra and later his sister Yingluck Shinawatra.

The Shinawatra­s fundamenta­lly changed Thai politics with populist policies aimed at wooing the country’s poor rural majority, but their time in power was also marred by allegation­s of corruption. Both Thaksin and Yingluck watched their government­s topple in coups and both now live in exile to avoid court conviction­s they say were politicall­y motivated.

To prevent a return to what it says was a “lost decade” of national peril, the junta drafted a constituti­on that neuters political parties in favor of non-elected bodies and even allows for an appointed prime minister. The junta itself gets to appoint many who would do the appointing, including the entire upper house of Parliament, which would also have some seats directly reserved for the military.

Powerful Deputy Prime Minister Prawit Wongsuwan, another former army chief and key junta member, said last week that he thought Prayuth should lead the next government but seemed to hint it should be by running in the election. “It must be the voice of the people,” he said.

Even if a traditiona­l politician or party were to come to power, they would be legally bound to follow a junta-devised national strategy that encompasse­s the next 20 years and that critics say will put a military stamp across a broad spectrum of future public policy.

For some in Thailand — where the junta has banned protests and political gatherings — all this spells doomsday for democracy.

“Our democratic future is going down the drain. Democratic space is closed, and public space is also closing. I don’t know if we can find any hope in the years ahead,” Naruemon Thabchumpo­n, a political scientist at Chiang Mai University, told an internatio­nal conference. “But we must at least understand the path along which we are going. We can’t just murmur and complain in our backyards.”

The military views things very differentl­y, arguing that it intervened to save the country from a possible civil war as deep cleavages in society erupted into violence, and from corrupt politician­s who manipulate­d a flawed political process.

“The military stepping in was the last resort,” Lt. Gen. Weerachon Sukhontapa­tipak, the deputy regime spokesman, said in an interview. “It may seem contradict­ory to say we staged a coup to restore democracy but it is indeed the case in Thailand. Military interventi­on this time, we hope, will be the last time.”

Similar arguments had been voiced in the past. The self-styled “Land of Smiles” has witnessed 12 coups since the end of the absolute monarchy in 1932. Uniformed or retired military men have helmed the country for 58 of the 86 years since despite minimal threat of foreign aggression: The last invasion, by the Burmese, occurred 250 years ago.

Critics contend the coup has resulted in the military’s strongest grip since the Cold War era of the 1970s.

“Thailand is heading at full speed to a dark, dictatoria­l past,” said Brad Adams, Asia director of the U.S.-based Human Rights Watch, noting that the country has gone from “democratic governance concerned about human rights to dictatoria­l military rule that systematic­ally prosecutes and imprisons activists.”

The junta has placed a particular emphasis on going after violators of the harsh lese majeste law, which forbids insults to the royal family, and the cases are now heard in military courts rather than civilian. About 120 people have been arrested since the 2014 coup including a 14-year-old boy, a prominent human rights lawyer facing up to 171 years in prison for Facebook comments, and a Buddhist scholar who questioned whether a heroic battle 400 years ago actually took place.

 ?? AP ?? Prayuth Chan-Ocha has hinted that he intends to continue leading Thailand’s government. Thailand is the world’s only nation still under formal military rule.
AP Prayuth Chan-Ocha has hinted that he intends to continue leading Thailand’s government. Thailand is the world’s only nation still under formal military rule.

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