Elections ‘hopefully’ in June 2017, junta says

Prayuth Chan-ocha at a military parade marking his retirement as commander in chief of the Royal Thai Army at the Chulachomklao Royal Military Academy in September 2014. File photo: AFP/Nicolas Asfouri

Thailand’s junta said yesterday elections are unlikely to take place before June 2017 in the latest delay to the restoration of democracy since the military seized power last year.

The kingdom’s generals had initially promised to return power to civilians within 18 months of their May 2014 putsch as they set about rewriting the country’s constitution.

That date was further pushed back to early 2016 and then scuppered entirely earlier this month when a military appointed council rejected the junta’s own draft constitution.

At a briefing for foreign diplomats in Bangkok on Wednesday, Deputy Prime Minister Wissanu Krea-ngam said the process of drafting a new constitution was expected to take 20 months.

“The total number is 20. Hopefully in June 2017 we will have the general election. And not long, one month after that, we will have the new elected government,” he said.

If the new election date is met, General Prayuth Chan-ocha’s junta will have spent more time in power than any other military government in Thailand since 1969.

Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai told reporters Prayuth had asked his appointees to try and speed up the new charter drafting process.

“The prime minister doesn’t want to stay on longer, he even asked for the shortening of the whole process,” he said.

The army seized power from an elected government in May last year, promising to calm the country after years of street protests and acrimony by political rivals.

The junta has said a new charter holds the key to bridging those divides before democratic elections can be restored, provisionally in mid-late 2016.

But critics had pilloried the document as divisive, anti-democratic and aimed at prolonging military rule.

For years the kingdom has been split between pro-democracy supporters of ex-premier Thaksin Shinawatra’s populist parties and a conservative elite backed by the military and judiciary.

Shinawatra-backed parties have won every election since 2001 but have been ousted by two coups and seen the removal of three prime ministers by the courts.

Story: AFP

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No elections likely until 2016, junta says




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