Thai court to rule on suspended PM Paetongtarn’s fate after leaked call

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If the court sacks Ms Paetongtarn,  Thailand will face a political crisis, with no obvious candidate on hand to lead the fragile ruling coalition in Parliament.

If the court sacks suspended Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra, Thailand will face a political crisis.

PHOTO: EPA

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BANGKOK – Thailand’s Constitutional Court met on Aug 29 to decide whether to throw suspended Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra out of office over her handling of the country’s border row with Cambodia.

Ms Paetongtarn, daughter of controversial billionaire ex-prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, was

suspended from office in July

after being accused of failing to stand up for Thailand in a June call with powerful former Cambodian leader Hun Sen, audio of which was leaked online.

If the court sacks Ms Paetongtarn, as it did her predecessor as prime minister a year ago, Thailand will face a political crisis, with no obvious candidate on hand to lead the fragile ruling coalition in Parliament.

The nine judges began their deliberations around 10am (11am Singapore time) with a ruling expected from 3pm.

Ms Jiraporn Sindhuprai, a close aide to Ms Paetongtarn, told reporters on Aug 29 that she was in “good spirits” ahead of the verdict.

The proceedings come a week after a criminal court

cleared Mr Thaksin, 76, of royal insult charges

in a case that could have seen him jailed for up to 15 years.

Ms Paetongtarn’s case centres on

her call with Mr Hun Sen

, Cambodia’s longtime ruler and father of its current premier, during which the pair discussed their respective countries’ then-brewing row over their disputed border.

Ms Paetongtarn addressed Mr Hun Sen as “uncle” and referred to a Thai military commander as her “opponent”, sparking a furious reaction in Thailand, where the armed forces hold huge sway.

Conservative lawmakers accused her of bending the knee to Cambodia and undermining the military, while Ms Paetongtarn’s main coalition partner walked out in protest, almost collapsing her government.

She clung on to power but a group of senators turned to the Constitutional Court, arguing she should be removed from office for breaching constitutional provisions requiring “evident integrity” and “ethical standards” from ministers. The court suspended her on July 1.

The 39-year-old leader and her Pheu Thai party say she did her best to act in her country’s interests, and last week she answered judges’ questions in the case.

As well as causing a domestic furore, the phone call – released in full online by Mr Hun Sen, to the Thai government’s fury – plunged relations between the neighbours into turmoil.

In July, the tensions spiralled into the two sides’ deadliest military clashes in decades, with more than 40 people killed and 300,000 forced to flee their homes along the border.

Political turmoil

Thai politics has been driven for two decades by a battle between the conservative, pro-military, pro-royalist elite and the Shinawatra clan, whom they consider a threat to the kingdom’s traditional social order.

Ms Paetongtarn is the sixth prime minister from the political movement founded by her father to face judgment by the Constitutional Court.

Up to now, only one – Mr Thaksin himself – has survived. The rest were all thrown out for reasons varying from vote-buying to appearing on a cookery TV show.

If Ms Paetongtarn is ousted, the kingdom faces political paralysis, with no obvious candidate to take over her role.

She currently leads an uneasy coalition with a group of smaller conservative parties who were long bitterly opposed to Pheu Thai.

Under the Thai Constitution, only candidates nominated for prime minister at the last general election are eligible for the office.

Of the nine names put forward by the main parties in the 2023 poll, four would be ineligible for various reasons; two are unpalatable to Pheu Thai; one no longer has the support of his party; one could face a court case of his own; and one is reportedly in poor health.

A new election would seem like the obvious solution, but it is not clear whether the current acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai can call polls, or whether only a prime minister approved by Parliament has the right to do so. AFP

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