Houston Chronicle Sunday

Thai prime minister wins no-confidence vote

- By Chalida Ekvithayav­echnukul

BANGKOK — Thailand’s prime minister survived a no-confidence vote in parliament on Saturday amid allegation­s that his government mismanaged the economy, bungled the provision of COVID-19 vaccines, abused human rights and fostered corruption. Nine other ministers also survived the vote.

It marked the second no-confidence test that Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha’s government has faced since taking office in July 2019, following a contested election after Prayuth seized power in a 2014 coup as the army chief. In February last year, he and five Cabinet ministers easily defeated a no-confidence vote in the lower house.

In the latest motion, Prayuth’s government was also criticized for misusing its power to promote police officials and for establishi­ng a cyber unit to attack government critics on social media, among other complaints.

But a more serious allegation was that Prayuth has deepened divisions in society by using the monarchy as a shield against criticism of his government.

A student-led protest movement has campaigned since last year for Prayuth and his government to step down. They want the constituti­on to be amended to make it more democratic, and for the monarchy to be reformed to make it more accountabl­e.

“The biggest fault of Prayuth is that he does not understand the principles of the constituti­onal monarchy,” said Pita Limjaroenr­at, leader of the opposition Move Forward Party.

“He used the monarchy to protect himself whenever he was criticized or opposed. This is an evil action, making him no longer qualified to be prime minister,” he said.

His accusation refers to the enforcemen­t of Article 112 of the criminal code, also known as the lese majeste law. Prayuth said in June last year that King Maha Vajiralong­korn had expressed his wish for the government not to use the law against defaming the monarchy to prosecute pro-democracy protesters.

The monarchy is widely considered an untouchabl­e bedrock of Thai nationalis­m.

The lese majeste law allows anyone to file a complaint with the police, with conviction­s carrying jail terms of up to 15 years per offense.

On Saturday, around 1,000 protesters staged a rally outside the gate of the parliament building, where speakers took turns denouncing the vote results.

Police said earlier that they would deploy more than 10,000 officers in Bangkok over the weekend to control the crowds.

 ?? Lillian Suwanrumph­a / AFP via Getty Images ?? A protester places his foot on a portrait of Thai Prime Minister Prayut Chan-ocha during an anti-government rally Saturday in Bangkok. The prime minister has been accused of mismanagin­g the economy and vaccine rollout, among other claims.
Lillian Suwanrumph­a / AFP via Getty Images A protester places his foot on a portrait of Thai Prime Minister Prayut Chan-ocha during an anti-government rally Saturday in Bangkok. The prime minister has been accused of mismanagin­g the economy and vaccine rollout, among other claims.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States