The Sun (Malaysia)

Thai king orders charter amendment

> Rare public interventi­on by monarch

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BANGKOK: Thailand’s new king has ordered sections of the country’s draft constituti­on to be rewritten, the junta chief said yesterday, a rare public interventi­on by the monarch in the kingdom’s politics.

King Maha Vajiralong­korn, 64, ascended the throne after the October death of his much loved father King Bhumibol Adulyadej, a unifying figure whose reign spanned seven decades.

Like most things regarding Thailand’s secrecy-shrouded monarchy, Vajiralong­korn’s approach to the crown remains a mystery and is not open to detailed scrutiny.

The country’s constituti­onal monarchy is granted limited formal powers but wields significan­t political clout behind the scenes and controls vast wealth.

It is also protected by a draconian lese majeste law, forcing media and the public to self-censor.

On Friday, junta chief Prayut Chan-OCha said the king had declined to sign off on the new charter because of clauses concerning royal powers.

“His majesty’s principal private secretary has sent a letter to the government saying discussion is needed on the section of the charter regarding the monarchy.”

The document was drafted by the junta after its 2014 power grab and approved in a controvers­ial referendum last year in which independen­t campaignin­g was banned.

“There are three or four points that need to be amended concerning his authority (as king),” Prayut said, without elaboratin­g on which specific clauses would be altered.

The revision process would take several months, he added.

It is an unusually assertive move by the palace – an institutio­n long portrayed as staunchly “above politics” despite several key interventi­ons by Bhumibol during times of political crisis.

The late monarch also forged close ties with the military during his rule and signed off on a dozen coups.

Vajiralong­korn’s relationsh­ip with the military and its allies within the Bangkok elite is less clear cut.

The current junta seized power in a coup that analysts believe was staged to ensure a smooth succession as Bhumibol’s health waned.

The army has promised an eventual return to democracy but the timeline for elections keeps slipping.

The junta’s draft charter will be the kingdom’s twentieth in under a century if it is promulgate­d. – AFP

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