Gulf Today

Thailand’s premier wins legal batle to stay in office

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BANGKOK: Thai Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha, under pressure from months of street protests, survived a legal challenge on Wednesday over his living arrangemen­ts that could have seen him thrown out of office.

The kingdom’s nine-judge constituti­onal court ruled that Prayut was not guilty of conflict of interest by living in an army residence ater leaving the military.

“The status of General Prayut Chan-o-cha as prime minister and defence minister remains unchanged,” the head judge said.

The court ruled that Prayut’s status as prime minister entitled him to live in the house even though he stepped down as army chief in 2014.

Ater the verdict, government spokesman Anucha Burapachai­sri said Prayut was “working as usual and following his official schedule as normal.”

The ruling, though widely expected, is likely to inflame the protest movement that has shaken Thailand since July calling for Prayut, who came to power in a 2014 coup, to quit.

As the judgment was read out, about 3,000 protesters massed for a fresh rally at a major intersecti­on in northern Bangkok. They included uniformed high school students wearing hair clips in the shape of rubber ducks, a symbol of the prodemocra­cy movement.

“I’m not surprised because I think the court received the directive from the top. The court is not fair,” Reeda, 26, a graduate student, told AFP as demonstrat­ors gathered at Lat Phrao intersecti­on.

“In the past they always decide decisions that contrast with the feeling of the people.”

The main opposition party Pheu Thai brought the legal challenge, which if it had succeeded would have forced Prayut and his cabinet out of office.

“The court’s ruling today shows that there’s inequality within government spending for civil servants,” opposition deputy chief whip Somkid Chuakong told reporters.

The court said the military had changed the status of the residence from an army house to a guest house in 2012 “so technicall­y, the defendant’s no longer living inside an army house”.

The premier has previously argued his family must stay at the army house on a military base for security reasons.

He appeared relaxed ahead of the decision, and toured a coconut farm on Wednesday, sending his lawyers to hear the verdict on his behalf. “If the court rules that you’ve done wrong then you’ve done wrong... if not then that’s the end of the story,” he told reporters in Bangkok on Tuesday.

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Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha poses with well-wishers for a selfie in Samut Songkhram province on Wednesday.
Associated Press ↑ Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha poses with well-wishers for a selfie in Samut Songkhram province on Wednesday.

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