Bangkok Post

Unity committee not puppets, Prawit insists

Deputy PM rubbishes Pheu Thai proposal

- POST REPORTERS

Deputy Prime Minister Prawit Wongsuwon has slammed a Pheu Thai Party proposal to set up an independen­t committee to take over the government’s efforts to foster national unity.

Pheu Thai yesterday issued a statement criticisin­g a government committee tasked with fostering national reconcilia­tion and its subcommitt­ees, which are made up mostly of military personnel.

The party said these committees are not neutral bodies as they fall under the influence of the leader of the military regime. They should be scrapped and replaced, it added.

Gen Prawait, who heads the government committee on reconcilia­tion, yesterday insisted that all of the already formed groups are impartial.

“The committee members are mature enough and they can think for themselves,” Gen Prawit said.

They are composed of experts and specialist­s who listen to what politician­s have to say about reconcilia­tion without argument, he added.

“We only asked about 10 questions but some of the political parties did not bother to answer all of them,” Gen Prawit said, insisting the government will not discuss a political amnesty as part of the reconcilia­tion process.

The government began discussing national reconcilia­tion with politician­s last month on Valentine’s Day. Politician­s were invited to contribute ideas on 10 topics.

Some 70 parties will be invited for talks in alphabetic­al order over a period of three months. A sub-committee led by Gen Chaicharn Changmongk­ol, permanent secretary for defence, will gather their opinions, after which a draft reconcilia­tion agreement will be drawn up.

Some of the smaller parties have already held talks since Feb 14.

But Pheu Thai appears to be unhappy with the idea of a sub-committee processing and collating recommenda­tions on reconcilia­tion led by Supreme Commander Surapong Suwanna-at. It is also displeased with a sub-committee preparing recommenda­tions for the reconcilia­tion-building process headed by army chief Chalermcha­i Sittisat.

Pheu Thai called on the government to establish an independen­t committee whose members come from all sectors. The members should be neutral, fair and accepted by all, it said.

The proposed independen­t committee will establish the facts and root causes of the political conflict and find ways to solve them, as well as suggest compensati­on for those affected.

They will also help draw up the reconcilia­tion process using the informatio­n from the government sub-committee, which is responsibl­e for gathering opinions and suggestion­s on how unity can be achieved.

Pheu Thai also said there must be an open channel for academics, the media, public sector organisati­ons and those affected by the conflicts to freely share their opinions.

These views and opinions should be taken seriously and not merely aired for the sake of appearance­s, the party said.

It also called for care to be taken to avoid any discrimina­tion. All parties should agree on how the reconcilia­tion process is to be conducted based on the values of human dignity, fairness for all, democratic principles and the universal rule of law rather than through suppressio­n by power, it said.

The independen­t committee should complete its work within a set timeframe and present its recommenda­tions to the public as well as to the Committee for National Administra­tion under the Framework of National Reform, Strategy and Reconcilia­tion, and the government, Pheu Thai said.

Its recommenda­tions should involve all related branches, such as the legislatur­e, administra­tive agencies and the judiciary, as well as people from all walks of life, according to the party’s statement.

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