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SKorean Ship Detained for Allegedly Providing Oil to NKorea

South Korean fishing boat P-PIONEER is seen a port in Busan, South Korea, Wednesday, April 3, 2019. Photo: Kim Jae-hong / Yonhap via AP
South Korean fishing boat P-PIONEER is seen a port in Busan, South Korea, Wednesday, April 3, 2019. Photo: Kim Jae-hong / Yonhap via AP

SEOUL, South Korea — A South Korean ship is being held at a domestic port over suspicions that it illegally provided oil to heavily sanctioned North Korea, Seoul officials said Wednesday.

A South Korean coast guard official said Wednesday the 5,160-ton P-PIONEER has been prevented from leaving Busan port since October over allegations that it was used to supply oil to North Korea through two ship-to-ship transfers in September 2017 in international waters in the East China Sea. He said the ship transferred diesel, but did not confirm how much was supplied.

An official from Seoul’s Foreign Ministry said it was the first time a South Korean ship was detained over allegations of violating United Nations Security Council Sanctions against North Korea over its nuclear weapons program. South Korea is also detaining three foreign vessels for illegally providing oil to North Korea or transporting North Korea-produced coal.

Both officials spoke on condition of anonymity, citing department rules preventing them from speaking to the press.

The U.N. Security Council in a report last month said North Korea was continuing to defy its resolutions through a “massive” increase in ship-to-ship transfers of petroleum products and coal.

Story: Kim Tong-Hyung

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Philippine Supreme Court Orders Release of Drug War Evidence

In this Oct. 9, 2018, file photo, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte addresses congressmen and Government officials during the presentation of Republic Act bills in a ceremony at the Presidential Palace in Manila, Philippines. Photo: Bullit Marquez / Associated Press
In this Oct. 9, 2018, file photo, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte addresses congressmen and Government officials during the presentation of Republic Act bills in a ceremony at the Presidential Palace in Manila, Philippines. Photo: Bullit Marquez / Associated Press

MANILA, Philippines — The Philippine Supreme Court on Tuesday ordered the release of police documents on thousands of killings of suspects in the president’s anti-drug crackdown, in a ruling that human rights groups said could shed light on allegations of extrajudicial killings.

Supreme Court spokesman Brian Keith Hosaka said the court ordered the government solicitor-general to provide the police reports to two rights groups which had sought them. The 15-member court, whose justices are meeting in northern Baguio city, has yet to rule on a separate petition to declare President Rodrigo Duterte’s anti-drug campaign unconstitutional.

Solicitor-General Jose Calida had earlier agreed to release the voluminous police documents to the court but rejected the requests of the two groups, the Free Legal Assistance Group and the Center for International Law, arguing that such a move would undermine law enforcement and national security.

The two groups welcomed the court order.

“It’s a big step forward for transparency and accountability,” said Jose Manuel “Chel” Diokno, who heads the Free Legal Assistance Group.

He said the documents will help the group of human rights lawyers scrutinize the police-led crackdown that was launched when Duterte came to office in mid-2016, and the massive number of killings that the president and police say occurred when suspects fought back and endangered law enforcers, Diokno said.

“This is an emphatic statement by the highest court of the land that it will not allow the rule of law to be trampled upon in the war on drugs. It is a very important decision,” said Joel Butuyan, president of the Center for International Law.

“These documents are the first step toward the long road to justice for the petitioners and for thousands of victims of the ‘war on drugs’ and their families,” Butuyan said.

More than 5,000 mostly poor drug suspects have died in purported gunbattles with the police, alarming Western governments, U.N. rights experts and human rights watchdogs. Duterte has denied ordering illegal killings, although he has publicly threatened drug suspects with death.

The thousands of killings have sparked the submission of two complaints of mass murder to the International Criminal Court. Duterte has withdrawn the Philippines from the court.

After holding public deliberations on the two groups’ petitions in 2017, the Supreme Court ordered the solicitor-general to submit documents on the anti-drug campaign, including the list of people killed in police drug raids from July 1, 2016, to Nov. 30, 2017, and documents on many other suspected drug-linked deaths in the same period that were being investigated by police.

Story: Jim Gomez

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Future Forward Leader Hit With Sedition Charge

A file photo of Future Forward Party leader Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit speaking at the party’s headquarters in Bangkok.
A file photo of Future Forward Party leader Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit speaking at the party’s headquarters in Bangkok.

BANGKOK — Another serious legal threat has hit the leader of Future Forward Party, this time an accusation of sedition.

Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit posted online on Wednesday a photo of a legal document showing that the Pathum Wan police have summoned him to hear charges over “causing disorder and disobedience among the public” that could lead to “the acts of rebellion.”

“When the dark power won’t leave Future Forward alone,” Thanathorn wrote in the accompanying post. “It’s clear now that the old-school political game won’t end after the election, but is only getting more intense, because they’re afraid of Future Forward.”

“They’re afraid of our wins that exceeded the expectations of many, afraid of politics based only on policies and ideologies that can build faith and support from the public without money or authority, afraid of the truth that nearly 6.3 million people sincerely support Future Forward Party,” he continued.

Thanathorn added that he would meet police investigators on Saturday as scheduled. If convicted, he faces a jail term of up to seven years.

The junta’s legal team said the charge was based on Thanathorn’s alleged involvement in a 2015 anti-coup demonstration, in which a group of activists staged a protest at the Pathum Wan police station. One of those activists was Rangsiman Rome, who might become one of Future Forward’s party-list MPs. The protesters were arrested and charged with violating the junta’s ban on political gatherings.

It’s the latest case of criminal prosecution and the most serious charge yet against Future Forward, a party with progressive policies that is popular among young people. The prosecutor’s office is also reviewing a cybercrime case against Thanathorn and two executive party members that involves online criticism of the ruling junta.

Thanathorn once served on the board of Matichon Group, which owns Khaosod English.

Party secretary-general Piyabutr Saengkanokkul said today that the police have also summoned him for reading a statement regarding the dissolution of Thai Raksa Chart Party and publishing it on the party’s website.

On Twitter, #savethanathorn shot to Thailand’s no.1 trending hashtag on Wednesday morning moments after Thanathorn posted about the sedition charge against him. Many users pledged their support and accused the military government of trying to destroy the party now that is has become a force to be reckoned with.

Although Future Forward started off as relatively unknown to the public and without any established politicians in its leadership, its unique stance opposing both the military and old-school Thai politics made it able to finish third at the polls, behind only political giants Pheu Thai and the junta-backed Phalang Pracharath.

The charge was revealed a day after army chief Gen. Apirat Kongsompong sent a warning to those who oppose the kingdom’s system of constitutional monarchy, which appeared aimed at Piyabutr who once advocated for reform to Thailand’s harsh lese-majeste law.

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Army Chief Sends Warning to Critics of the Monarchy

In this Friday, Jan. 18, 2019, file photo, Thai army chief Gen. Apirat Kongsompong reviews the guard of honor during the Royal Thai Armed Forces Day ceremony at a military base in Bangkok, Thailand. Photo: Sakchai Lalit / AP
In this Friday, Jan. 18, 2019, file photo, Thai army chief Gen. Apirat Kongsompong reviews the guard of honor during the Royal Thai Armed Forces Day ceremony at a military base in Bangkok, Thailand. Photo: Sakchai Lalit / AP

BANGKOK — Thailand’s influential army chief warned Tuesday that the military will fight any moves that threaten the country’s system of constitutional monarchy with the king as head of state, in an apparent threat directed at supporters of a new anti-junta party.

“The army does the army’s duty, which is to protect, maintain, and defend the institutions of nation, religion, and monarchy,” Gen. Apirat Kongsompong said at a news conference.

Apirat appeared to be targeting intellectuals backing the Future Forward Party, which according to preliminary figures ran a strong third in the March 24 general election.

Apirat’s words “come as an intimidating knock-out punch against any Thai political critics of Thailand’s system of government,” said Paul Chambers, a lecturer in political science at Naresuan University in northern Thailand. “But more explicitly, the words seem to attack Future Forward Party, whose leaders have seemed particularly critical of the junta and military, and who in the past discussed the monarchy.”

Future Forward Party co-founder Piyabutr Saenkanokkul used to be part of the Nitirat Group, legal scholars who sought reforms in Thailand’s lese majeste law, which carries stiff prison terms for people found guilty of defaming the monarchy.

Apirat suggested that scholars who have studied abroad may have lost their understanding of the “Thai-style democratic system.”

Pitabutr received his master’s and doctoral degree in France, and other prominent members of the Nitirat Group studied law in Germany.

“Don’t introduce the leftist views you learned that made you all pretentious,” Apirat said.

The military-backed Phalang Pracharath Party won the most popular votes in the March polls, and its candidate, Prayuth Chan-ocha, is likely to become prime minister, but could end up with the opposition holding a majority of seats in the House of Representatives. Prayuth led a 2014 coup that ousted an elected government and since then has served as junta chief and prime minister.

Supporters of the Future Forward Party believe the courts and the Election Commission may try to disqualify some of its winning candidates, or even the entire party, ahead of the release of official election results on May 9.

Thai social media since the election has been buzzing with postings seeking to discredit the Future Forward Party.

One recently circulated video shows excerpts of a lecture Piyabutr gave in 2013, when he taught law at Bangkok’s Thammasat University. He has said it was to explain the relationship of democracy to monarchies in political systems worldwide. But it has been cast by his party’s opponents as criticism of Thailand’s monarchy.

An obscure right-wing group, Political Civic Group, said it has filed a complaint with the Election Commission about Piyabutr’s statements, claiming they violated election law. He has denied the allegations against him and charged the video was taken out of context to undermine him.

Apirat also criticized activists who charge that the Election Commission mismanaged the polls and are seeking to impeach its members.

“Once the referee has made a ruling, you blame the referees. When boxers fight, this guy loses, and you blame the referees. If it’s like this it will never end. It will be a never-ending cycle of revenge and disapproval. How can it end? I’ve said already,” Apirat said, before taking a long pause. “I don’t want to say something too harsh.”

After becoming army commander, Apirat told reporters last October that he refused to rule out more coups if there is political unrest.

“If politics does not create riots, nothing will happen,” he said.

His father, Gen. Sunthorn Kongsompong, helped carry out a 1991 coup and served as junta leader for more than a year.

Story: Grant Peck

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Germany Protests to Brunei Envoy Over Anti-Gay Law Plans

A file photo of the Omar Ali Saifuddien Mosque in Bandar Seri Begawan, the capital of Brunei. Photo: Bernard Spragg / Flickr
A file photo of the Omar Ali Saifuddien Mosque in Bandar Seri Begawan, the capital of Brunei. Photo: Bernard Spragg / Flickr

BERLIN — Germany’s Foreign Ministry has protested Brunei’s plans to implement Islamic criminal laws that punishes gay sex by stoning offenders to death.

In a statement Tuesday, the ministry said German diplomats expressed concern at the introduction of Sharia law penalties and appealed to Brunei’s ambassador Monday to “abide by existing international human rights obligations.”

The legal change in the tiny, oil-rich monarchy, which also includes amputation for theft, is due to come into force Wednesday.

Human rights group Amnesty International has slammed the punishments as “vicious.”

American actor George Clooney, who is married to prominent human rights lawyer Amal Clooney, called recently for a boycott of luxury hotels in Europe and the United States linked to Brunei’s Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah.

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Singapore Carrier Grounds 2 Boeing 787-10 Jets After Checks

In this March 31, 2017, file photo, Boeing employees walk the new Boeing 787-10 Dreamliner down towards the delivery ramp area at the company's facility in South Carolina after conducting its first test flight at Charleston International Airport in North Charleston, S.C. Photo: Mic Smith / Associated Press
In this March 31, 2017, file photo, Boeing employees walk the new Boeing 787-10 Dreamliner down towards the delivery ramp area at the company's facility in South Carolina after conducting its first test flight at Charleston International Airport in North Charleston, S.C. Photo: Mic Smith / Associated Press

SINGAPORE — Singapore Airlines has grounded two of its Boeing 787-10 aircraft due to engine issues, the carrier said Tuesday.

It said in a statement that “premature blade deterioration was found on some engines” of its 787-10 fleet at recent routine inspections.

“Pending engine replacements, two SIA 787-10 aircraft have been removed from service,” it said.

The carrier said it would operate other aircraft on the affected routes to minimize disruption. It said some flights were disrupted but gave no details.

Singapore Airlines said it was consulting engine manufacturer Rolls-Royce and the relevant authorities for next steps and any precautionary measures.

SIA became the first carrier in the world to fly the 787-10, beginning last year. The 337-seat aircraft includes 301 seats in economy and 36 lie-flat seats in business class.

Like many other places, Singapore has grounded Boeing 737 Max aircraft following two fatal crashes of Max 8 planes, in Indonesia in October and in Ethiopia last month.

Correction: An earlier version of this article incorrectly said Boeing 787 Max planes have been grounded due to two fatal crashes. In fact, they were 737 Max planes.

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Detailed and Public, Kim Jong Nam Murder May Never be Solved

In this June 4, 2010, file photo, Kim Jong Nam, the eldest son of then North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, waves after his first-ever interview with South Korean media in Macau. Photo: Shin In-seop / JoongAng Ilbo via AP
In this June 4, 2010, file photo, Kim Jong Nam, the eldest son of then North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, waves after his first-ever interview with South Korean media in Macau. Photo: Shin In-seop / JoongAng Ilbo via AP

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — The murder of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s estranged half brother at an airport in Malaysia was brazen, intricately orchestrated and, thanks to scores of security cameras, witnessed by millions around the world.

The real masterminds behind the killing, however, may never be brought to justice.

The murder charge was dropped against an Indonesian woman, who was freed last month. Her co-defendant, a Vietnamese woman who is the only suspect in custody, pleaded guilty — not to murder, but to the lesser charge of using a deadly weapon to cause injury — and will be freed as early as next month.

Her guilty plea and sentencing on Monday concluded more than two years of legal proceedings. But it cleared up none of the mystery.

Here’s a look back at the crime, the missing masterminds and the ending.

The crime

On Feb. 13, 2017, when Kim Jong Nam appeared at a check-in counter at a Kuala Lumpur airport terminal, he was jumped by two women who smeared something on his face. He soon began to feel ill, found his way to a medical station and was taken by ambulance to a hospital. He was dead within a matter of hours.

The women — Indonesian Siti Aisyah and Doan Thi Huong of Vietnam — were arrested soon afterward.

Huong was seen on security video wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with “LOL” across the chest. The video, and video of the chubby, blue jean-clad victim staggering around before his death, went viral.

From the start, this was obviously no ordinary crime.

Aisyah and Huong were accused of using VX nerve agent, a poison developed for military use, and the victim was the eldest son of the late North Korean leader Kim Jong Il, and half brother of current leader Kim Jong Un.

For a time, Kim Jong Nam had been seen, at least by outside experts, as a potential heir to the country’s leadership. But he was caught, and humiliated, trying to enter Japan in 1998 to visit Tokyo Disneyland. He ended up in de facto exile, spending most of his time in Macau, a Chinese territory famous for its casinos.

By the time of his death, he wasn’t part of the North Korean political scene. But his freedom to reside in Macau indicated he had some Chinese support. It’s possible he was seen by some as a viable replacement if Kim Jong Un were ever to be removed from power.

Soon after Kin Jong Nam’s murder, his son, Kim Han Sol, appeared in a YouTube video in which he claimed he, his mother and sister were under the protective care of a group calling itself “Cheollima Civil Defense.”

The same group is believed to be behind an attack on the North Korean Embassy in Madrid last month in which 10 people allegedly shackled and gagged embassy staff before escaping with computers, hard drives and documents.

The missing masterminds

Malaysian officials have never officially accused North Korea of involvement in Kim’s death. North Korea has denied any involvement.

But prosecutors made it clear throughout the trial they suspected a North Korean connection.

Four North Korean suspects were seen on airport security video discarding their belongings and changing their clothing after the attack. The North Korean Embassy has also been implicated, with an embassy official helping obtain flights out of Malaysia for the four men, and using the name of one of its citizens to buy a car that took the suspects to the airport.

At Malaysia’s request, Interpol issued a “red notice” for the four North Koreans wanted in connection with the killing.

Investigators said the North Korean suspects met the women at the airport and were believed to have provided them with the VX nerve agent used in the murder.

The North Koreans are suspected of scouting and training the women, who say they thought they were taking part in a candid camera-style prank show for television. Malaysian police believe the North Korean suspects flew out of the country the day of the killing and returned to Pyongyang.

Investigations into Kim’s death led to a diplomatic spat between Malaysia and North Korea. Malaysia scrapped visa-free entry for North Koreans and expelled North Korean Ambassador Kang Chol after he rejected Malaysia’s investigation and insisted the victim was an ordinary citizen who died of a heart attack. Kang Chol also accused Kuala Lumpur of colluding with outside forces to defame North Korea.

North Korea then banned Malaysians in its country from leaving, entrapping three diplomats and six of their family members. The nine Malaysians were only allowed to fly back after Malaysia released Kim’s body to North Korea and allowed the North Koreans to leave, including an embassy official and a North Korean Air Koryo employee wanted by police for questioning over Kim’s death.

Following last year’s summit between President Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un in Singapore, Malaysia’s government has said it may re-establish ties with North Korea and reopen its embassy in Pyongyang.

The ending

With the North Korean suspects missing, the two women were left to face the charges.

After some high-level lobbying by Indonesia’s government, the Malaysian attorney general decided to drop the murder case against Aisyah on March 11.

Aisyah, 26, cried and hugged her Vietnamese co-defendant before leaving the courtroom. She was driven away in an Indonesian Embassy car and then flown back to Jakarta, where she thanked the president and other officials for their help.

“I feel happy, very happy that I cannot express in words,” she told reporters at Jakarta’s airport. “After this I just want to gather with my family.”

Huong, 30, also sought to be released after Aisyah was freed, but prosecutors rejected her request.

Both had faced a murder charge that carried the death penalty if they were convicted. Prosecutors on Monday said they were offering Huong a reduced charge, and High Court judge Azmi Ariffin sentenced her to three years and four months from the day she was arrested, telling her she was “very, very lucky” and wishing her “all the best.”

Vietnamese officials in the courtroom cheered when the decision was announced.

Her lawyer, Hisyam Teh Poh Teik, said she is expected to be freed by the first week of May, after a one-third reduction in her sentence for good behavior. He said four North Korean suspects still at large were the “real assassins.”

As she was being escorted out of the court building, Huong shouted to reporters: “It’s very good. I love you.” She told reporters earlier that she wants to “sing and act” when she returns to Vietnam.

Story: Eileen Ng and Eric Talmadge

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Toxic Smog Turns Thousands of Tourists Away From North

People are seen wearing face masks as they walk Monday in Chiang Rai’s Mae Sai district.
People are seen wearing face masks as they walk Monday in Chiang Rai’s Mae Sai district.

CHIANG MAI — Officials said tourist numbers to northern Thailand have plunged over the past month due to severe air pollution that continues to surge across the region.

Seasonal smog in the north which residents have long complained about has worsened to the point of impacting the tourism sector. Hotel bookings near popular attractions across Chiang Mai and Chiang Rai have sharply dropped with tens of thousands of visitors turning to other destinations.

Tourism Authority Governor Yuthasak Supasorn said Monday that the problem has mostly affected Thai visitors, who have canceled about 15 percent of their hotel bookings in Chiang Mai since last month. He added that March reservations in the popular Chiang Dao district have declined by about 50 percent compared to the same period last year.

A representative of Chiang Rai’s Federation of Industries said the pollution situation this year has been “particularly bad.” He said hotel reservations there have dropped by up to 20 percent compared to 2018, adding that several visitors have turned to the south instead.

A Czech tourist who was visiting Chiang Mai last week said she “can’t breathe,” adding that she decided to head south instead of continuing to Chaing Rai and Laos as she originally planned.

“I thought I was ready for the situation because I knew that Chiang Mai would be very smoggy. I even brought a mask with me,” Eliska Kopecka said Tuesday. “At first it was fine, however after a couple of days my eyes were itchy … my throat was sore and I really started to feel the smog on me.”

Kopecka said some fellow tourists she knew had also changed their plans to go south to avoid the smog.

Suthirawat Suwanawat, general manager of Suvarnabhumi International Airport, said Tuesday that the number of tourists flying to the north from both of Bangkok’s airports has collectively decreased by about 10,000 a day in recent weeks. Numbers fall even as the world-famous festival of Songkran that normally generates tens of billions of baht in tourism approaches.

Air quality in Chiang Mai today was at “unhealthy” levels while Chiang Rai was at “very unhealthy” levels, according to monitoring organization AirVisual. The situation has been similar in several northern provinces including Phayao and Mae Hong Son. The deteriorating air quality in the north prompted junta leader Prayuth Chan-ocha to fly there today.

Transport Minister Arkhom Termpittayapaisith today said about 40 flights have been grounded in Mae Hong Son since late February due to poor visibility from smog and smokes.

The problem in the north has largely been blamed on severe open burning both in and outside the country.

A public health official in Chiang Rai said yesterday that the province’s situation had greatly aggravated in the past couple of days, warning of serious health effects especially among vulnerable groups such as elders, small children and those who already suffer from chronic respiratory diseases.

Praphai Piriyasurawong, a professor at Chiang Rai Rajabhat University which has canceled classes because of the smog, said by phone Tuesday that many of his acquaintances have fallen sick. He himself has felt the effects acutely because he has allergies.

“It’s very bad. When I go outside, my eyes are irritated and I feel dizzy almost immediately,” he said. “The tear glands of one of my students have even leaked pus.”

As a Chiang Rai resident of 15 years, Praphai thinks that the situation this year has worsened because of the weather.

“There are normally thunderstorms during March which bring rain. The rain helps ease the smog levels,” he said. “It’s almost Songkran and there hasn’t been rain.”

During today’s visit to Chiang Mai, Gen. Prayuth emphasized the importance of enforcing a ban on open burning, while officials continued to deploy fire trucks to spray water across the city.

Related stories:

Air is So Dirty in Northern Thailand, Leader Flies to See It

Northern University Cancels Classes Due to Smog

Chiang Mai’s Foul Air No Priority to Bangkok, North Complains

Chiang Mai Tops World Pollution Charts

Breathe in Thailand and Die Up to 4 Years Sooner: Research

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EC Must Be Transparent in Computing Party-List MPs: Observer

Student activists collect signatures for a petition to impeach the Election Commission Tuesday at Thammasat University, Tha Prachan campus.
Student activists collect signatures for a petition to impeach the Election Commission Tuesday at Thammasat University, Tha Prachan campus.

BANGKOK — The Election Commission should be transparent and thorough in announcing the formula it will use to compute the distribution of party-list MPs, said a prominent election observer on Tuesday.

The warning from P-Net, Thailand’s largest group of independent election observers, came after the Election Commission’s secretary general Jarungvith Phumma revealed that the commission will release the formula by the conclusion of this week. Jarungvith added that the commission has yet to compute the number of party-list MPs.

“In order to create trust, they need to make the process transparent,” said Laddawan Tantivitayapitak, the vice president of P-Net, on the phone.

The issue of how to compute the distribution of party-list MPs has become contentious since the election a week ago, since different interpretations of the law could result in different formulas. Various parties and media organizations have come up with different computations as the commission has refused to release the number of party-list MPs.

While Laddawan acknowledged that revealing the formula only after polling could be perceived as a partial act, she believes that the commission genuinely did not foresee the mathematical complexity of computing party-list MPs.

“They have to explain the formula used that is in line with the intention of the law,” said Laddawan, noting that she is not mathematically qualified to make a decision on the matter.

Before the March 24 general election, it was widely understood that some 70,000 votes are needed to secure one party-list seat. Now some computations claim that less than 50,000 votes will suffice.

In a related development, Election Commissioner Pakorn Mahannop defended the commission’s decision not to count 1,542 advanced voting ballots from New Zealand. Pakorn compared the ballots to raffle tickets which arrive after the prizes have already been given.

“Please think about various elections and raffles. Once the process is done, all cards and documents submitted to exercise one’s rights cannot be counted,” said Pakorn.

Laddawan criticised the comparison of the election to a raffle. She added that it was the commission, rather than voters, which had failed to be attentive enough to pick up the ballot papers in time.

“They can’t just excuse themselves,” said Laddawan.

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Analysis: Thai Election Shows Divisions and Instability Remain

In this March 27, 2019, file photo, workers load campaign billboards displayed to promote candidates for a general election into a truck in Bangkok, Thailand. Photo: Gemunu Amarasinghe / Associated Press
In this March 27, 2019, file photo, workers load campaign billboards displayed to promote candidates for a general election into a truck in Bangkok, Thailand. Photo: Gemunu Amarasinghe / Associated Press

BANGKOK — Thailand’s junta leader looks set to return as prime minister after a general election stacked heavily in his favor, but the process reveals that more than a decade’s polarization in Thai politics is as strong as ever.

Rather than ensuring stability, the sharply divided vote almost guarantees new struggles over power, which could involve parliament, street protests or even fresh military intervention.

A self-declared “democratic front” of seven political parties says a preliminary vote count from the March 24 election shows it will be able to put together a majority in the House of Representatives.

But the junta-appointed Senate also takes part in the vote for prime minister, meaning junta leader and Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha will likely need to win only one-quarter of the elected representatives in the lower house to get his job back.

Prayuth as army commander led the 2014 coup that toppled an elected government, and many people would see his taking power again through a carefully manipulated process as just the latest instance of Thai voters having their choices overruled by legal or extralegal means.

It would still be far from smooth sailing even if Prayuth and his allies in the Phalang Pracharath party form a government, while the anti-junta coalition led by the Pheu Thai party holds a majority in the House of Representatives.

A Prayuth-led government “won’t be able to pass laws and pass budgets,” said Pornson Liengboonlertchai, a professor of political science at Bangkok’s Thammasat University. “There’s a likelihood that they will become an ineffective government because there could be a no confidence vote which relies on majority votes, and there’s a likelihood that Prayuth will face that, a vote of no confidence.”

With the final election results not being certified until May 9, there’s a good chance the numbers — perhaps whittled down by disqualifications — will not give the anti-junta coalition a majority.

But this runs the risk of appearing that the junta-friendly Election Commission is helping to steal the election, creating a public backlash and the possibility of street protests.

“If they go the nuclear option and get rid of one of the parties, entirely dissolve them, then I think you may see people getting really, really, really upset,” said Kevin Hewison, a professor emeritus at the University of North Carolina and veteran Thai studies scholar.

In the worst-case scenario, the failure to establish a working government could invite new intervention by the military.

“My big fear is that there’s going to be another coup,” Hewison said. “They’ll say, ‘Look, this hasn’t worked, we’ll set them straight again.'”

The army’s excuse for staging its coup in 2014 was to end political strife that deadlocked the country’s administration.

Aside from the maneuvering to form a new government, the vote showed that what Thailand’s people want is not uniform and perhaps not even clear after nearly half a decade in which political activities were banned and freedoms of speech and assembly were severely restricted.

The preliminary results of the election, though marred by alleged irregularities, paint the picture of a nation deeply divided between those for and against military rule.

Of course divisions are nothing new in Thailand. The country’s politics have been defined by them since the rise of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, a telecommunications tycoon who came to power in a populist political revolution nearly two decades ago.

Thaksin was beloved by many in the countryside for policies such as universal health care and farm subsidies, but was loathed by many in the country’s conservative establishment who saw him as corrupt and a threat to the traditional role of the monarchy at the center of Thai society. He was ousted by a 2006 coup and is now in exile.

“The election seems above all to have made clear the depth of continuing divisions,” said Michael Montesano, coordinator of the Thailand Studies Program at Singapore’s ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute. “At the same time, the rhetoric used by some on the Thai right in support of the Phalang Pracharath party may have inflamed the concerns of voters worried about former Prime Minister Thaksin’s continued influence on Thai politics and broader threats to the old status quo.”

But the dominating factor of Thaksin as boogeyman may be fading, with the rise of what some analysts see as a third force, the Future Forward Party, which starting from scratch without the benefit of old-school politicians in its leadership managed to pull off a third-place finish in the polls, both in terms of popular vote and likely seat total.

The party has a youth-oriented appeal but also a frank anti-military stance, and as more or less amateurs, stands apart from the other major contenders.

Part of the party’s appeal is that it has given those opposed to both military rule and Thaksin a path to express themselves.

Party leader Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit has said he would join a coalition and support a Pheu Thai prime minister. Yet in a recent interview, when a reporter asked him to say the first word that popped in his head when he heard the name Thaksin, his answer was telling: “History.”

The anti-Thaksin forces may still see the battle as one against the former prime minister and his political machine, but others such as the Future Forward and Pheu Thai are trying to move it toward a pro-democracy versus anti-democracy dialogue, said Jacob Ricks, a political scientist at Singapore Management University.

“Thaksin is appearing less important in their discussion, while he remains front and center for the military and their allies,” he said.

Montesano said one of the upsides of the election is that divides in Thailand are no longer so much about Thaksin.

“The downside may be that voter sympathy for or patience with a continuing authoritarian orientation toward politics has become evident,” he said.

He said it was unlikely these divisions can be overcome in the foreseeable future, especially if “Phalang Pracharath continues to push to install either Gen. Prayuth or an outsider into the premiership, if Future Forward stays true to its electoral platform, and if meaningful progress in addressing inequality in Thai society does not occur.”

Story: Grant Peck

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Bangkok
overcast clouds
28.8 ° C
28.8 °
28.8 °
74 %
2.5kmh
97 %
Mon
33 °
Tue
32 °
Wed
33 °
Thu
35 °
Fri
27 °