The Manila Times

New Thai king pardons prisoners in ‘first show of mercy’

- AFP

BANGKOK: Thailand’s new King Maha Vajiralong­korn has issued a “mercy” as monarch as he reaches out to his subjects following the death of his beloved father.

Revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej died in October aged 88 after a seven-decade reign, leaving the politicall­y febrile nation without

His only son, 64-year-old Vajiralong­korn, was proclaimed king in early December.

But the thrice-divorced monarch is yet to draw the same level of devotion from a public well-versed in rumors over his private life.

The prisoner pardon was Vajiralong­korn’s “first chance since he succeeded the throne to show the king’s mercy,” according to a statement published on Sunday in palace mouthpiece the RoyalGazet­te.

Pardons were annual events under Bhumibol.

some inmates who have served one third of their sentences, and prison- ers with disabiliti­es or serious illness were among those pardoned.

The decree did not say how many prisoners will be freed.

Ritual, propaganda and law underpin the status of Thailand’s monarchy.

Thai schoolchil­dren are taught the primacy of the institutio­n, while huge portraits of key royals adorn virtually every main street.

Like his father, Vajiralong­korn is shielded from criticism by a harsh royal defamation law that carries up to 15 years in jail per charge.

That has embedded a culture of self-censorship across the media, academia and the arts.

The prisoner pardons follow a slew of public appearance­s by the new king, whose four decades as designated heir were characteri­zed by publicity- shyness and long trips overseas.

Since he was proclaimed King Rama X, the new monarch has of hall and been honored in a video tribute played in cinemas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines