/ 1 October 2006

Thailand gets post-coup PM, constitution

Thailand’s military rulers announced a stop-gap prime minister and constitution on Sunday, fulfilling a promise to step back in favour of civilians within two weeks of their coup against Thaksin Shinawatra.

In other signs of the situation stabilising, the tanks that have stood outside Government House since the September 19 putsch rolled back to the barracks and the coup leaders released four of Thaksin’s most powerful ministers from army custody.

Shortly after, television stations announced the interim constitution, army chief and coup leader Sonthi Boonyaratglin confirmed that Surayud Chulanont, a retired general, would be prime minister under a gradual plan to restore democracy.

”I went to his house and spent half an hour convincing him to take the job while the country is in crisis. He has agreed to take it,” General Sonthi told reporters at a news conference.

A formal swearing-in ceremony was set for 4.45pm local time.

Under the new charter endorsed by revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej, 63-year-old Surayud will take charge to keep the economy ticking over while a panel of eminent Thais draws up a new long-term constitution.

According to the generals’ ”democracy roadmap”, this should take about nine months, at the end of which there will be a referendum and national elections.

Military civilian

Although a career military man, Surayud — until now a senior royal adviser — has a reputation as a reformer who recognised the need to keep soldiers out of politics in a country that has now seen 18 coups in seven decades of democracy.

The coming months could test his patience to the limits as he tries to convince Thais and outsiders he is marching the country back to democracy at the same time as keeping his old friends in the army happy.

Despite promises not to interfere, doubts remain about the military’s neutrality, especially given that the coup leaders are staying on in the form of a Council for National Security (CNS) with the power to dismiss the interim administration.

”He has to keep the military in line, he has to seem legitimate and he has to avoid the appearance of being a stooge or being a puppet to the military,” said Thitinan Pongsudhirak of Bangkok’s Chulalongkorn University.

”He also has to get things done. This is a tough balancing act.”

Having ousted Thaksin without a shot being fired, Sonthi promised to hand power to civilians within two weeks, a pledge that ensured domestic goodwill but failed to avert international condemnation of Thailand’s first coup in 15 years.

The interim charter guarantees basic human rights and sets up an assembly of 2 000 eminent persons to start work on a long-term constitution, but it also enshrines the coup leaders’ security role and their ability to hire and fire governments.

Calming fears

Officials have tried to assuage concerns about the army overshadowing the return to democracy, saying the authority to sack the government is largely hypothetical.

”It is a power that is in reserve. I don’t think they foresee a situation to resort to it,” senior Foreign Ministry official Krit Garnjana-Goonchorn said.

Sonthi told Reuters on Friday the CNS would play a role only in security matters, such as tackling an insurgency in the Muslim far south where over 1 700 people have been killed since 2004.

”I can assure you it is impossible that we will control the government,” he said in an interview at Army Headquarters. ”We will be the government’s tool to keep peace.”

He also said Thaksin, a telecoms billionaire who won election landslides in 2001 and 2005 but now lives in exile in London, should not return to Thailand as the ”domestic situation has not settled yet”.

However, his four most trusted aides — Deputy Prime Minister Chidchai Vanasatidya, chief of staff Prommin Lertsuradej, Prime Minister’s office Minister Newin Chidchob and Environment Minister Yongyut Tiyapairat — have been released after 10 days of army custody.

”It is the police’s job to look after them from now,” Sonthi said.

In one of the few signs of public opposition to the coup, Thai newspaper websites reported on Saturday that a taxi daubed with slogans saying ”Destroying the country” and ”Die for the country” rammed a tank in Bangkok.

The taxi was badly damaged and the driver taken to hospital with damaged ribs. The tank was unscathed. — Reuters