Desk Report
Publish: 25 Aug 2022, 12:37 pm
Protesters (not pictured) gather next to a picture of Thailand's Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha outside the Government House, as the Constitutional Court suspended Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha from official duties on Wednesday, after deciding to hear a petition to review his legally mandated eight-year term limit, in Bangkok, Thailand, Aug 24, 2022 || Photo: REUTERS
Suspended Thai Prime Minister
Prayuth Chan-ocha is to attend a defence ministry meeting on Thursday as a
longtime ally begins his first full day as acting premier and Thailand settled
in for weeks of uncertainty while a court ponders Prayuth's future.
Prayuth, 68, retained his cabinet
position as defence minister after the Constitutional Court on Wednesday
suspended him from the top job pending a review of his constitutionally
mandated term limit.
The court decided to hear a
petition from the main opposition party arguing that Prayuth, who first came to
power in a coup in 2014 when he was army chief, has reached the eight-year term
limit because his time as junta chief should count.
The court suspended Prayuth until
it delivers a verdict on the petition. It has not given a date.
Prayuth has made no public
comment on the court's decision and it was not clear if he would speak about
the matter on Thursday.
A government spokesperson said on
Wednesday Prayuth respected the decision and urged the public to do the same,
and the government would function as normal.
Deputy Prime Minister Prawit
Wongsuwan, 77, also a royalist and ex-army chief with longstanding ties with
Prayuth, has taken over as interim leader but was not expected to make a public
appearance on Thursday.
Prayuth ruled as head of a
military council after he overthrow an elected government in 2014.
He became a civilian prime
minister in 2019 following an election held under a 2017 military-drafted
constitution in which an eight-year limit for a prime minister was set.
Thailand's next general election
is due by May next year.
The controversy over Prayuth's
tenure could revive old rivalries at the root of nearly two decades of
intermittent political turmoil, including two coups and violent protests,
stemming broadly from opposition to military involvement in politics and
demands for greater representation as political awareness grows.
'PRAYUTH SHOULD RESIGN'
The main opposition Pheu Thai
party, which lodged the petition, was the party forced from power in the 2014
coup, when Prayuth ousted a government led by Yingluck Shinawatra, the sister
of former prime minister and telecoms tycoon Thaksin Shinawatra.
Both Yingluck and Thaksin, who
was ousted in a 2006 coup, live abroad in self-exile.
The Pheu Thai leader, Chonlanan
Srikaew, called for Prayuth to resign.
"For the sake of the
country, General Prayuth should resign so we can begin the process of selecting
a prime minister based on the constitution as fast as possible," Chonlanan
said in a post on Facebook.
Prayuth's supporters argue that
his term started in 2017, when a new constitution took effect, or after the
2019 election, meaning that he should be allowed to stay in power until 2025 or
2027, if he retains backing in parliament.
Even if the court later rules
Prayuth's term has reached its limit, his ruling coalition has the votes in
parliament to choose the next prime minister.
Public reaction to Prayuth's
suspension was muted but a small group of pro-democracy activists set off
fireworks near the prime minister's residence on Wednesday night and tussled
with police.
"Prawit has always been with
Prayuth... there is not a lot of differences between them," youth activist
Patsaravalee Tanakitvibulpon told Reuters.
"What the regime is doing is
swapping the player but the same network remains in power," she said.
Business leaders said the
political turmoil may shake investor confidence in Southeast Asia's
second-largest economy, the Bangkok Post reported, though adding that the
sector was "upbeat".
"No matter what happens to
the premier, the business sector remains upbeat that the Thai economy can
manage growth," said Sanan Angubolkul, chairman of the Thai Chamber of
Commerce.
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