Thailand, seeking stability, approves
military constitution
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[August 08, 2016]
By Amy Sawitta Lefevre and Panarat Thepgumpanat
BANGKOK (Reuters) - A democratically
elected government will take power in Thailand at the earliest by
December 2017, a senior Thai official said on Monday, after the country
endorsed a military-backed constitution paving the way for a general
election.
Thais handed the junta of Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha a convincing
win in the referendum on Sunday, with preliminary results showing over
61 percent voted in favor. Full results are due on Wednesday.
A desire to see greater political stability drove the yes vote, analysts
said. Thailand has been rocked by more than a decade of political
turmoil that has stunted growth, two military takeovers and several
rounds of often deadly street protests.
"We think there will be an election at the earliest in September or
October 2017 and a new government by December 2017," Chatchai Na Chiang
Mai, spokesman for the Constitution Drafting Committee, told Reuters.
Deputy Prime Minister Wissanu Krea-ngam on Monday also said an election
will take place in 2017, confirming the timeline Prayuth laid out ahead
of the referendum.
Prior to the vote, Thailand's major political parties had criticized the
draft constitution, saying it would constrict democracy, including one
provision calling for an appointed Senate with seats reserved for
military commanders.
Few countries have had more constitutions and drafters have historically
failed to produce anything lasting. Thailand has issued 19 constitutions
since a constitutional monarchy replaced an absolute one in 1932.
Members of the anti-junta opposition say they are biding their time
until the 2017 election when, if a party they back takes power, they can
try to scrap the military charter.
"We accept the result of the referendum and will wait and see what
happens in the 2017 election," said Jatuporn Prompan, chairman of the
United Front for Democracy Against Dictatorship.
"We will decide our next steps soon," he said.
Opposition to the junta was muted ahead of the vote in Thailand's
northeast, once a hotbed of resistance.
ELECTING PRIME MINISTER
A second ballot question that would allow the Senate to elect a prime
minister jointly with the lower house was also winning by a wide margin.
"Although many suspected that the new charter could undermine their
previously held democratic rights, the perceived risk of greater
political uncertainty and economic instability, if the constitution had
been voted down, was far less appealing," said John Marrett, Research
Analyst Asia at the Economist Intelligence Unit.
Interviews with military officers showed the military's ambition was to
make future coups unnecessary by weakening political parties and
obliging future governments to follow a 20-year national development
plan set by the army.
The referendum result would legitimize the junta's bid to extend its
hold on power through the constitution said Sunai Phasuk, Thailand
researcher at Human Rights Watch.
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Thai soldiers line up at a polling station during a constitutional
referendum vote in Bangkok, Thailand August 7, 2016. REUTERS/Kerek
Wongsa
"It will embolden junta leader Prayuth to think he has millions of
Thais behind him and it will extend military control not for one or
two years but 20 years," Sunai told Reuters.
Thai investors welcomed the result on Monday and the Thai stock
market touched a fresh 16-month high.
The 'yes' vote would be positive for the economy and investment in
the second half of 2016, Bank of Thailand Governor Veerathai
Santiphrabhob said on Monday.
STILL DIVIDED
Thailand has been divided for more than a decade between rival
camps. One of them is led by former populist premier Thaksin
Shinawatra, who was toppled in a 2006 coup and later went into
self-exile.
The Puea Thai Party, which carried his sister Yingluck to power in a
2011 election, was removed from office in the 2014 coup.
Pitted against Thaksin and his allies is the royalist and military
establishment which accused him of nepotism and abuse of power,
accusations he denied.
Thaksin's supporters credit him with recognizing the inequality
between urban Bangkok and the poor in the rural north and northeast.
Preliminary results show the northeast, a Thaksin stronghold, the
far north and the three Muslim-majority southern provinces, where an
insurgency has raged since 2004, voted against the draft.
The results show Thailand remains divided, said Sunai at Human
Rights Watch.
"In the south this is a denial of control of the Thai Buddhist
state. In the northeast, it reflects how, regardless of the junta's
attempt to dismantle the Puea Thai machinery, hearts are still with
Thaksin."
(Additional reporting by Aukkarapon Niyomyat; Writing by Amy Sawitta
Lefevre; Editing by Simon Webb and Bill Tarrant)
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