Site icon The Indian Panorama

Thailand’s junta chief appointed PM by hand-picked House

BANGKOK (TIP):
Thailand’s coup leader General Prayuth Chan-ocha was appointed prime minister on August 21 by a legislature he hand-picked, giving the army chief a veneer of legitimacy even while the military presses on with efforts to silence its critics. The army seized power on May 22 in a bloodless coup following six months of street protests that contributed to the ousting of Yingluck Shinawatra, whose government was opposed by the Bangkok royalist establishment.

Although Prayuth’s appointment paves the way for an interim government to be set up in the coming weeks, power will remain in the junta’s hands. The general has said he plans to press ahead with a year of political reforms before a new election takes place by late 2015. “It is designed to give him the power to run the country according to the law.

The premier position will give him legal power in the Thai governance system,” Gothom Arya, a lecturer in human rights studies at Mahidol University, said. The nomination comes as no surprise – the National Legislative Assembly that chose Prayuth, 60, is largely considered a rubber stamp parliament tasked with enacting sweeping reforms under the army’s watch. Prayuth will retire as army chief in September but will stay on as head of the junta, formally known as the National Council for Peace and Order. reuters

Exit mobile version