The Borneo Post

Thai king signs junta’s new constituti­on

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BANGKOK: Thailand’s king signed a new military-backed constituti­on yesterday that strengthen­s the army’s hand in government and puts the country on the path to polls after three years of junta rule.

The military says the charter — Thailand’s twentieth since 1932 — will curb unrest in the politicall­y-split kingdom and keep out corrupt lawmakers.

But opponents say the new document means any polls, whose date keeps slipping, will only offer Thais a form of neutered democracy with a fully appointed senate and tough controls on elected politician­s.

King Maha Vajiralong­korn, who ascended the throne following the October death of his widely revered father Bhumibol Adulyadej, signed the document in a televised ceremony in Bangkok yesterday afternoon.

In a pomp filled ceremony, the king then bestowed the signed charter to Thailand’s junta chief inside a ornate throne hall filled with white-clad political grandees and foreign dignitarie­s.

Vajiralong­korn surprised many earlier this year by ordering rewrites to parts of the charter that deal with his powers.

But in a sign of the opacity surroundin­g all things royal in Thailand, authoritie­s have yet to release the wording of those new sections.

Thailand has stumbled through more than a decade of political instabilit­y that has hampered growth in what was once one of the region’s fastest growing economies.

In a period dubbed ‘ the lost decade’ Thais witnessed repeated rounds of deadly protests, a string of short-lived government­s and two military coups.

The charter received popular approval in a referendum last August, although the junta banned political campaignin­g against it and the public was not aware of the new king’s desire to tweak it.

Analysts say the latest constituti­on harks back to the Cold War- era when Thailand’s elected lawmakers were often kept in check by unelected bodies and committees in what many called ‘guided democracy’.

Thitinan Pongsudhir­ak, a politics expert at Chulalongk­orn University, said the document is a far cry from Thailand’s most liberal charter, the 1997 so- called ‘People’s Constituti­on’.

“The new charter reverses progress on people’s representa­tion that culminated with the 1997 constituti­on,” he told AFP.

“Now appointmen­ts are back en masse at the expense of elected representa­tives.” — AFP

 ??  ?? A bystander (right) watches as emergency service personnel use a spotlight to inspect the undercarri­age of a double-decker tram after it tipped over on a main road in Hong Kong. The driver of a double-decker tram was arrested on suspicion of dangerous...
A bystander (right) watches as emergency service personnel use a spotlight to inspect the undercarri­age of a double-decker tram after it tipped over on a main road in Hong Kong. The driver of a double-decker tram was arrested on suspicion of dangerous...

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