Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

King’s sacking of consort and the growing power of Thai monarchy

- - Courtesy the Guardian, UK

According to her official royal biography, now removed from the palace website, Sineenat, nicknamed Koi, was formerly known as Niramon Ounprom. She was born in north Thailand’s Nan province on 26 January 1985. In 2008 she graduated with a nursing de g ree from Bangkok’s Royal Thai Army nursing college, then worked as a nurse at the Phramongku­tklao and Ananda Mahidol hospitals.

In 2015 she signed up to the Ratchawall­op police retainers, a unit acting as a pool of bodyguards to Vajiralong­korn that reportedly has hundreds of thousands of members. Sineenat received military training and obtained a private pilot’s licence.

By 2016, the year in which Vajiralong­korn became king, video and photos of him and Sineenat together in Germany started appearing online. They showed the pair wearing skimpy clothes and fake tattoos as they cruised malls and tourist spots.

Sineenat’s appointmen­t on 28 July this year made Vajiralong­korn the first Thai monarch since King Rama VI, who ruled from 1910 to 1925, to publicly acknowledg­e multiple female companions. Her consort ceremony was followed by the palace releasing images of her piloting a military plane and shooting a gun. Such images previously had been reserved for the king’s close relatives, and they resembled the military- style photos of Queen Suthida released for her birthday.

The palace said Sineenat had “expressed her opposition and exerted her pressure in every possible way” with regards to Suthida being crowned queen in May this year.

Vajiralong­korn’s power shows no sign of abating and he has proved to be an assertive constituti­onal monarch. His face peers from shrines and billboard advertisem­ents in Bangkok, the latter placed by companies declaring loyalty. A schmaltzy video montage of the king growing up, featuring images of members of the public crawling at his feet, plays in cinemas before film screenings. Audience members are compelled to stand for it

This month he demanded that some of Thailand’s most powerful army units come under his command, giving him military control unpreceden­ted for a monarch in the country in modern times. This met almost no resistance in parliament.

 ??  ?? Vajiralong­korn and Sineenat in a photo released by the Thai royal palace in August.
Vajiralong­korn and Sineenat in a photo released by the Thai royal palace in August.

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