Sudarat's Exit May Be Long-Term Tactical Move to Strengthen Pheu Thai
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The Pluralistic Poverty of Phalang Pracharat
ISSUE: 2021 No. 29 ISSN 2335-6677 RESEARCHERS AT ISEAS – YUSOF ISHAK INSTITUTE ANALYSE CURRENT EVENTS Singapore | 12 March 2021 Thailand’s Elected Junta: The Pluralistic Poverty of Phalang Pracharat Paul Chambers* Left: Deputy Prime Minister and Phalang Pracharat Party Leader General Prawit Wongsuwan Source:https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Prawit_Wongsuwan_Thailand%27s_Minister_of_D efense.jpg. Right: Prime Minister and Defense Minister General Prayut Chan-ocha Source:https://th.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E0%B9%84%E0%B8%9F%E0%B8%A5%E0%B9%8C:Prayu th_2018_cropped.jpg. * Paul Chambers is Lecturer and Special Advisor for International Affairs, Center of ASEAN Community Studies, Naresuan University, Phitsanulok, Thailand, and, in March-May 2021, Visiting Fellow with the Thailand Studies Programme at the ISEAS – Yusof Ishak Institute. 1 ISSUE: 2021 No. 29 ISSN 2335-6677 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY • Thailand’s Phalang Pracharat Party is a “junta party” established as a proxy for the 2014-2019 junta and the military, and specifically designed to sustain the power of the generals Prawit Wongsuwan, Prayut Chan-ocha and Anupong Paochinda. • Phalang Pracharat was created by the Internal Security Operations Command (ISOC), and although it is extremely factionalized, having 20 cliques, it is nevertheless dominated by an Army faction headed by General Prawit Wongsuwan. • The party is financed by powerful corporations and by its intra-party faction leaders. • In 2021, Phalang Pracharat has become a model for other militaries in Southeast Asia intent on institutionalising their power. In Thailand itself, the party has become so well- entrenched that it will be a difficult task removing it from office. 2 ISSUE: 2021 No. -
August 31, 2020 Thai Enquirer Summary Political News
August 31, 2020 Thai Enquirer Summary Political News The big news today that is on the front pages of all major media outlets is The government has decided to delay the procurement of the 2 more submarines worth 22.5 billion baht by 1-year The deal is reportedly already struck with the Chinese authorities to delay the procurement All major navicular Thai language media have the delayed procurement story on their front page Such a report is said to prompt government MPs who sit on a House committee scrutinising the budget bill for the fiscal year of 2021 to propose a cut to a budget of more than 3 billion baht earmarked for the first down payment for the 2 subs to be cut. There is a report that the navy has succeeded in negotiating with China to ask it to delay the procurement of the 2 subs for 1 more year. Deputy finance minister Santi Promphat, who is chairman of the main House committee examining next fiscal year’s budget House budget committee, said he will inform the committee’s meeting about the delay of the acquisition plan today (August 31). The government of embattled Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha seems to be twisting the facts again in order to gain acceptance and also try to wade off pressure that has been building over the weekend on how the government has already spent more than 200 million baht to fight a case of mine closure (Akara Resources that is owned by Australian firm Kingsgate Consolidated) Kingsgate has already filed a case that would see the government lost up to US$ 1 billion This amount and the amount used to fight the case of about 300 million baht in total (if 2020/2021 budget was included) has been raised by the Kao Klai party as being something that the country should not take the burden because Gen. -
July 30, 2020 Thai Enquirer Summary Political News • Today Is the Day
July 30, 2020 Thai Enquirer Summary Political News Today is the day that the 2 sides of the protestors are set to stage rallies in different parts of Bangkok. The anti-government movement that has been gaining momentum is set to hold its rally at Taksin monument roundabout in Wongwein Yai area of Thonburi side of the city while The Archiva Chuai Chart (vocational students for the nation) scheduled to be held at the Democracy Monument today. Although both venues are not near each other, fears are that there could be some kind of clash with mischiefs that have been reported when it comes to dealing with the Archiva Chuai Chart (vocational students for the nation) people who were instrumental in the so called ‘popcorn gunman’ in Laksi area during the 2013/2014 street protests. One has to remember that the former leader of the Archiva Chuai Chart (vocational students for the nation) was contesting elections under the Action Coalition for Thailand (ACT) party, a party that was set up by the leader of People’s Democratic Reform Council (PDRC) – Suthep Thaugsuban. Danai Tipyan, was the leader of the Archiva Chuai Chart (vocational students for the nation) He had also contested the election in Thungsong district in the south of the country but did not win a seat from that constituency. Meanwhile there are leaked reports that showed that the authorities are looking at putting pro-democracy protestors in jail although the students have come out to say that they are not afraid of this tactic and that the protest will continue as planned on August 1, 2020. -
August 13, 2021 Thai Enquirer Summary COVID-19 News
August 13, 2021 Thai Enquirer Summary COVID-19 News Thailand recorded yet another day of record infection today Today’s numbers are as follows: Total New Infections = 23,418 Community Infection = 23,030 Prison Infection = 388 Total positive cases (ATK/Antigen) = 1,523 Total New Death = 184 Total New Recovery = 20,083 Total Infection including ATK = 24,941 Total infections so far since outbreak = 863,189 Total deaths so far since outbreak = 7,126 Details of data for each day can be found @ https://ddc.moph.go.th/covid19-dashboard/ Thailand’s efforts to control the 3rd wave seems to be stretched and the country continues to struggle with the Thai public health system being put to its limit with hospital beds scarce and morgue space even more scarce. Besides doctors, nurses, and hospital administrators who are being stretched thin, forensic technicians have also been pushed to their breaking point. Technicians and forensic doctors are required to determine whether a patient died of Covid-19 or other causes. Cold storage trucks are now being used to keep bodies. Read more details in our story today – https://www.thaienquirer.com/31190/morgues-pushed-to-limit-as-the- number-of-bodies-double/ CAUTION – Graphic images are not for everyone. Warning from Dr. Manoon Leechawengwong, a specialist in respiratory diseases at Vichaiyut Hospital On his personal Facebook, Dr Manoon said that the next 100-days would be the most crucial one for Thailand as infection numbers are set to continue to rise. He said that In the next 100 days, the number of real cases of COVID-19 in Thailand may increase to 35 million, half of the country will be infected. -
Visa Runs 'Are Safe' Despite Violence
Volume 11 Issue 2 News Desk - Tel: 076-236555January 10 - 16, 2004 Daily news at www.phuketgazette.net 20 Baht The Gazette is published in association with Visa runs Long delays clog ‘are safe’ IN THIS ISSUE despite NEWS: Patong Mayoral race; scores register as ‘poor’; airport arrivals Queer News.Pages 2, 3 & 4 violence By Dhirarat Boonkongsaen INSIDE STORY: The poor of Phuket – the reality. By Supaporn Sriprom Pages 4 & 5 PHUKET: Officials have admit- ted that visitors to Phuket are PHUKET: Visa runs through AROUND THE ISLAND: Facial being forced to wait up to two- Narathiwat are still safe despite stamps for fun; Students set and-a-half hours to get through a wave of attacks on police, sol- to walk the higher path. Customs and Immigration at diers and schools across prov- Page 6 Phuket International Airport be- inces close to the border with AROUND THE REGION: Second cause of chronic staff shortages. Malaysia, travel agents in Phuket Samui airport gets the go- Delays are a constant bug- and Narathiwat said on January ahead. Page 8 bear for arriving and departing 5. passengers and extreme hold- Attacks on January 4 in PEOPLE: One-to-one with a ups occur when two or three air- Narathiwat left four soldiers Phuket trail-blazer; Off the craft packed with holidaymakers dead, 20 schools torched and a Wall. Pages 10 & 11 arrive within minutes. small arsenal of weapons seized. TALES OF A TRAVELER: Con- One frustrated airline offi- Two police officers in neighbor- quering India’s Golden Tri- cial emailed the Gazette, “It is ing Pattani province were killed angle. -
Thailand's 2019 Vote: the General's Election
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Singapore Management University Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Research Collection School of Social Sciences School of Social Sciences 1-2019 Thailand's 2019 Vote: The General's Election Jacob RICKS Singapore Management University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research Part of the Asian Studies Commons, and the Political Science Commons Citation RICKS, Jacob.(2019). Thailand's 2019 Vote: The General's Election. Pacific Affairs, 92(3), 443-457. Available at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/3074 This Journal Article is brought to you for free and open access by the School of Social Sciences at Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Research Collection School of Social Sciences by an authorized administrator of Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University. For more information, please email [email protected]. Thailand’s 2019 Vote: The General’s Election Jacob I. Ricks Abstract Thailand’s March 2019 ballot was the first for the country since 2011, and for many it signaled the potential end of the military junta’s five-year rule. But was it truly a return to democracy? This essay argues that the election was far from a democratization event. Instead, it was a highly orchestrated exercise to ensure authoritarian longevity. The junta employed techniques of institutional engineering as well as managing the election’s outcomes in an effort to extend the premiership of Prayuth Chan-ocha despite increasing pressure for a return to civilian rule. -
July 5, 2021 Thai Enquirer Summary COVID-19 News • the Data for July 5 Covid-19 Infection Just Came out and Thais Are Advised
July 5, 2021 Thai Enquirer Summary COVID-19 News The data for July 5th Covid-19 infection just came out and Thais are advised to brace themselves for possibility of the situation getting worse. Total New Infections - 6,166 Community Infection - 6.082 Prison Infection - 84 Total New Death - 50 Total New Recovery - 2,534 The local community infection has surpassed the 6,000 mark for the 1st time in history of Covid-19 outbreak. The data for the average for 1st 5-days of July suggests that over the past 3 months the numbers are rising fast From May 1-5 Total New Infections - 1,949 Total New Deaths - 23 For June 1-5 Total New Infections - 3,001 Total New Deaths - 36 From July 1-5 Total New Infections - 5,986 Total New Deaths - 51 Missing partying? Well, there are options for you even if Krystal & Emerald Thonglor, the 2 pubs/bars that has been the root cause of the 3rd wave are closed. These 2 pubs was frequented by supposedly Transport Minister Saksiam Chidchob, who was also infected with Covid-19. Parties are still allowed in the area, so claims MCOT news early this morning. MCOT early today made the allegation that private parties continues into the wee hours of the day at ‘CU_E EKK_M_I One needs to fill in the blanks to find out where that is The allegations were made by a HiSo who reportedly knows things on his Instagram posting. Talking about parties, well Thonglor/Ekkamai area is taking the lead from the leaders of the country who were partying in Phuket after the ‘Phuket Sandbox’ opened up on July 1st. -
Thailand's 20 December 2020 Provincial Elections: a Contest
ISSUE: 2020 No. 145 ISSN 2335-6677 RESEARCHERS AT ISEAS – YUSOF ISHAK INSTITUTE ANALYSE CURRENT EVENTS Singapore | 18 December 2020 Thailand’s 20 December 2020 Provincial Elections: A Contest among National Political Parties and a Quasi-Party? Evidence from the Andaman Coast Michael J. Montesano* EXECUTIVE SUMMARY • Voters across Thailand will go to the polls on 20 December 2020, to elect chairmen of provincial administrative organisations and members of the councils of those organisations. • At a time of deep-seated political crisis in the country, observers have assumed the “nationalisation” of Thai provincial politics, and the central relevance of political parties to that process. • Consideration of political parties’ decisions on whether formally to contest the 2020 provincial elections and close scrutiny of races for the post of provincial administrative organisation chairman in four provinces on the Andaman Coast of South Thailand suggest that this relevance, along with the role of parties, remains minimal. • In 2020, provincial-national dynamics in Thai politics, as mediated by political parties, thus demonstrate little change from patterns of the recent past. • Even the much-noted effort of the Progressive Movement led by Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit to nationalise provincial polls does not seem to defy this pattern. • Thai political parties may rely on local structures of power, respect and influence in fighting national elections. But to see candidates in provincial elections simply as torch-bearers for national parties is to adopt a flawed understanding. * Michael J. Montesano is Coordinator, Thailand and Myanmar Studies Programmes, ISEAS – Yusof Ishak Institute, and a co-editor of the forthcoming book Praetorians, Profiteers or Professionals? Studies on the Militaries of Myanmar and Thailand (ISEAS Publishing). -
Who Is Thaksin Shinawatra?
THE THAKSINIZATION OF THAILAND Ukrist Pathmanand Duncan McCargo Duncan McCargo and Ukrist Pathmanand For decades, Thailand was economically dynamic, yet politically shambolic. 1997 changed all that: the Asian economic crisis, closely followed by the promulgation of a new liberal constitution in Thailand, paved the way for the political rise of Thaksin Shinawatra, a fabulously wealthy telecommuni- cations magnate often compared with Italian premier Silvio Berlusconi. Although presenting itself as a national, transformative party, at heart Thaksin’s ruling Thai Rak Thai Party was little more than a vehicle for the OF THAILAND THE THAKSINIZATION interests and ambitions of its founder-leader. After winning a landslide election victory in 2001, Prime Minister Thaksin exercised an extraordinary degree of personal dominance over the Thai political scene. He was re- elected in 2005, the first Thai premier to do so. Though toppled by a military coup in 2006, Thaksin continues to exert a powerful influence on Thai poli- tics today, both in terms of his legacy and ongoing political activities. This book – by two leading scholars in the field – is an analysis of Thaksin at the height of his power. It examines Thaksin’s background, his business activities, the emergence of Thai Rak Thai, his relationship with the military, Thaksin’s use of rhetoric through media such as radio, his wider political economy networks, and what this all meant for the future. The result is essential reading for students, academics, journalists, dip- lomats, investors – and anyone else who needs to understand the Thaksin phenomenon in present-day Thailand. Winner of the 2009 Bernard Schwartz Book Award for his Tearing Apart the Land, Duncan McCargo is professor of Southeast East Asian politics at the University of Leeds. -
Martial Law – Police – Prisons – Bribery
Refugee Review Tribunal AUSTRALIA RRT RESEARCH RESPONSE Research Response Number: THA31785 Country: Thailand Date: 30 May 2007 Keywords: Thailand – Pro-democracy activists – Freedom of speech – Arbitrary arrest – 2006 Coup – Martial law – Police – Prisons – Bribery This response was prepared by the Country Research Section of the Refugee Review Tribunal (RRT) after researching publicly accessible information currently available to the RRT within time constraints. This response is not, and does not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any particular claim to refugee status or asylum. Questions 1. Are political proponents of democracy in Thailand subjected to any adverse attention from the Thai authorities? 2. To what extent are such proponents subjected to arbitrary arrest and detention? 3. To what extent does the Thai government restrict freedom of speech? 4. Are individuals able to criticise the government publicly without reprisal? 5. Has the situation for such proponents of democracy worsened since the coup of 19 September 2006? 6. Does martial law still operate in Thailand? 7. If so, where? 8-13. Questions deleted. 14. Is there any evidence to support the claim that the payment of bribes to the police would be necessary to achieve a person’s release from prison in Thailand? RESPONSE 1. Are political proponents of democracy in Thailand subjected to any adverse attention from the Thai authorities? Thailand was democratically governed from 1992 until 19 September 2006. According to the US Department of State report on human rights practices in Thailand for 2006, “[o]n September 19, in a bloodless coup d’etat, military coup leaders overthrew the government of Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra”. -
Thaksin's 2005 Electoral Triumph: Looking Back From
Michael H. Nelson Thaksin’s 2005 Electoral Triumph: Looking Back From the Election in 2007 Working Paper Series No. 98 February 2008 The Southeast Asia Research Centre (SEARC) of the City University of Hong Kong publishes SEARC Working Papers Series electronically ©Copyright is held by the author or authors each Working Paper. SEARC Working Papers cannot be republished, reprinted, or reproduced in any format without the permission of the papers author or authors. Note: The views expressed in each paper are those of the author or authors of the paper. They do not represent the views of the Southeast Asia Research Centre, its Management Committee, or the City University of Hong Kong. Southeast Asia Research Centre Management Committee Professor William Case, Director Dr Vivienne Wee, Associate Director Dr Catherine Chiu Dr James Lee Southeast Asia Research Centre The City University of Hong Kong 83 Tat Chee Avenue Kowloon Tong, Hong Kong SAR Tel: (852 3442 6106 Fax: (852) 3442 0103 http://www.cityu.edu.hk/searc Thaksin’s 2005 Electoral Triumph: Looking Back From the Election in 2007 Michael H. Nelson Faculty of Political Science, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand Southeast Asian Studies, University of Passau, Germany [email protected] Southeast Asia Research Centre Working Paper Series, No. 98, 2008 1 After Thaksin Shinawatra had led his Thai Rak Thai (Thai Loves Thai, TRT) party to an overwhelming election victory in February 2005, by December 2007, he should have passed the half-way mark of a comfortable second term as Thailand’s incontestably elected prime minister, implementing his campaign slogan of “si pi som si pi sang” (four years of repairs, four years of building up). -
July 23, 2020 Thai Enquirer Summary Political News • the Centre For
July 23, 2020 Thai Enquirer Summary Political News The Centre for COVID-19 Situation Administration (CCSA) meeting chaired by Prime Minister General Prayuth Chan o-cha yesterday (July 22) approved an extension of the state of emergency for Thailand, for the 4th time, by 1 month until the end of August. National Security Council Secretary-General, Somsak Roongsita, stressed that the state of emergency is still necessary to effectively control the virus in Thailand reopens its door to selected groups of travellers to help revive the economy. “The extension of the state of emergency is only to curb the COVID-19 pandemic. It has nothing to do with political rallies,” he said. The government has extended its state of emergency 4 times so far with the first from March 26 to April 30, then to May 31, and then to June 30 to combat COVID-19 before extending it again. The decision to extend the State of Emergency was criticized by opposition political parties, while critics said the emergency law was meant to curb large anti-government protests, National Security Council Secretary-General, Somsak said the latest extension won’t include a rule prohibiting them. The decision will be presented to the Cabinet next week on July 29. In the light of the CCSA’s decision to extend the state of emergency until August 31, opposition Pheu Thai Party chief strategist Sudarat Keyuraphan lashed out at the government calling it to scrap the emergency law immediately. In her Facebook post, Sudarat questioned the need to extend the state of emergency, citing 2 reasons.