
Thousands of protesters take to streets demanding Thai prime minister's resignation over leaked phone call
The rally, the largest since her party took power in 2023, was led by long-time opponents of the Shinawatra political dynasty, accusing her government of failing to uphold democratic principles.
Protesters claim Ms Paetongtarn is being influenced by Hun Sen and her father, Thaksin Shinawatra.
Undeterred by the monsoon rain, thousands of demonstrators gathered at the Victory Monument in Bangkok on Saturday, blocking roads, waving Thai flags and holding placards with slogans like 'PM is enemy of state'.
Protest leader Parnthep Pourpongpan declared that Ms Paetongtarn 'should step aside because she is the problem', according to BBC News.
Ms Paetongtarn, 38, is the daughter of ousted former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who returned to Thailand last August after 15 years in exile. In office for just 10 months, she is the country's second female prime minister, following in the footsteps of her aunt, Yingluck Shinawatra.
The campaign group – the United Power of the Land to Protect Sovereignty group – vowed to intensify its campaign against the prime minister after a surprisingly large crowd joined their rally at Bangkok's Victory Monument on Saturday, The Bangkok Post reported.
The group has also rejected claims by the Pheu Thai Party and others that they are advocating for a military coup.
Besides demanding the prime minister's immediate resignation, the group has called for all coalition parties to withdraw from the government. In a statement, the group accused the executive branch and parliament of failing to act 'in the interest of democracy and constitutional monarchy', according to Reuters.
Veteran Thai protest leader Sondhi Limthongkul told supporters he does not want the political crisis to escalate into another military coup, but added he 'won't object if the military does something', The Bangkok Post reported.
Speaking to thousands at Bangkok's Victory Monument on Saturday evening, he said: 'Do not bring in those generals [to govern]. Let people like us in [the government],' he said.
Mr Sondhi told the crowd: 'If we forget history, we are doomed to repeat it. Twenty years ago, I stood on a stage calling for Thaksin to step down. Now, two decades later, I'm forced to call for his daughter's resignation.'
'This is not the last protest. If change must come from the streets again, then so be it.'
In the call with Hun Sen, Ms Paetongtarn appeared to blame Thailand's military for escalating border tensions with Cambodia and used a conciliatory tone, including referring to Mr Hun Sen as 'uncle'.
The call came after a border dispute escalated into an armed clash on 28 May in a small piece of no man's land claimed by both countries. The clash resulted in the death of a Cambodian soldier.
The call, leaked after the former Cambodian leader reportedly distributed it to some 80 politicians, outraged nationalists in Thailand and led to the Bhumjaithai party, Ms Paetongtarn's largest coalition partner, quitting the government and bringing it near collapse.
The Thai prime minister has publicly apologised for the leaked call and insisted that it was a negotiation tactic, but critics claim it undermined Thailand's national sovereignty. The two countries share a thorny relationship, especially over border disputes.
'I would like to apologise for the leaked audio of my conversation with a Cambodian leader, which has caused public resentment,' Ms Paetongtarn said earlier.
Hun Sen, on his part, had taken to Facebook to share the entire phone conversation 'to avoid any misunderstanding or misrepresentation in official matters'.
Ms Paetongtarn explained that the call to Hun Sen was made from her personal phone, and she had no knowledge it was being recorded or would be made public. She said her government remained fully committed to supporting the Thai military.
The Shinawatra family in Thailand and the Hun family in Cambodia have long-standing personal ties, reportedly referring to each other as 'godbrothers'. Critics in Thailand see this closeness as compromising Thai interests, particularly in sensitive border negotiations.
Meanwhile, support for Ms Paetongtarn has dropped significantly, according to a new political survey conducted between 19 June and 25 June, The Nation Thailand reported. It polled 2,500 people across various demographics and regions.
Nonarit Bisonyabut, a senior researcher at the Thailand Development Research Institute (TDRI), said the sharp decline in support for Ms Paetongtarn and her government reflected a rising public appetite for new solutions to the country's problems, potentially even paving the way for a general election to bring in alternative policy visions.
'The decline in the prime minister's popularity reflects an accelerating loss of public confidence in the government and its past performance,' Mr Nonarit said.
Kriangkrai Thiannukul, chairman of the Federation of Thai Industries (FTI), said: 'Mass protests are not a good sign. They directly undermine Thailand's leverage in international negotiations. Next week, the government will enter retaliatory tariff talks with the United States, led by the Deputy Prime Minister and Commerce Ministry officials. If political unrest makes headlines, it could affect Thailand's credibility, weakening its negotiating position.'
On Tuesday, a constitutional court in Thailand will consider the petition for Ms Paetongtarn's removal.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
For retailers, US-Vietnam trade deal leaves questions
LONDON, July 3 (Reuters) - A trade deal announced by the U.S. and Vietnam creates new question marks for sportswear and clothing retailers like Nike and Adidas that source shoes and clothes from factories in the Southeast Asian country, industry experts said on Thursday. The U.S. will impose a 20% tariff on many imports from Vietnam, while "transshipping" from third countries through Vietnam will face a 40% levy, President Donald Trump said on Wednesday. Garment and shoe factories in Vietnam rely heavily on yarns, polyester fabrics, and trims like buttons and zippers imported from neighbouring China. It was not immediately clear whether such products assembled in Vietnam from Chinese inputs would be vulnerable to the transshipment tariff. Typically, transshipment would designate a product mostly made in China, shipped to Vietnam and then relabelled and exported as made in Vietnam. U.S. customs already watches for that practice, but the Trump administration has hardened its stance on it, with U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent saying that "a huge amount" of trade from Vietnam is transshipment from China, in a CNBC interview Thursday. Many questions remain over the trade agreement, said Sheng Lu, professor of fashion and apparel studies at the University of Delaware. "Strictly speaking, transshipment is illegal, whereas using foreign components in compliance with rules of origin requirements is common practice," said Lu. "Confusing these two distinct practices will only create greater uncertainty and risk further supply chain disruption." Vietnam has been a top destination for retailers and brands looking to reduce their reliance on factories in China, but has also become a target of Trump's aggressive trade policy. Vietnam is a key producer of sports shoes for Nike, accounting for 50% of Nike branded shoes overall in the company's fiscal year 2024, and is also Adidas' biggest supplier country, producing 27% of the German brand's products. A Nike spokesperson said the company is still looking into the details of the deal. Adidas declined to comment. "With this new change and with the potential for this transshipment tariff, I think it's going to cause a lot of importers to really question, is Vietnam really a good other option?" said Lila Landis, a customs compliance consultant based in Fort Worth, Texas. While details are still not confirmed, the 40% tariff could possibly be stacked atop the correct China duty for any given product, making it highly punitive, Landis added. Overall, the U.S. imported 274 million pairs of shoes from Vietnam last year, according to industry group Footwear Distributors and Retailers of America (FDRA), which on Wednesday called the tariffs unnecessary and said they would hit American consumers. "There's disappointment in the 20% on the Vietnam side," said Joe Jurken, managing director at supply chain management company The ABC Group. The announced tariff on Vietnam narrows the gap with China, which the U.S. has hit with a 55% tariff, and may even tempt some brands to stick with China, Jurken said, instead of switching suppliers which is lengthy and costly. "There's a lack of capacity in Vietnam because there's not enough factories, and there's an overabundance of capacity in China... so the Chinese factories, in our opinion, will benefit from this over the short term," Jurken said. Still, the 20% tariff rate is better than the 25-30% rate the market feared, according to analysts at Raymond James. And the deal announcement goes some way to end uncertainty, and could encourage some retailers that were considering Vietnam to go ahead and place orders, said Jim Kennemer, managing director at Cosmo Sourcing. "It's going to be nearly impossible to get a 100% not-China supply chain," he said.


The Guardian
3 hours ago
- The Guardian
Young Europeans losing faith in democracy, poll finds
Only half of young people in France and Spain believe that democracy is the best form of government, with support even lower among their Polish counterparts, a study has found. A majority from Europe's generation Z – 57% – prefer democracy to any other form of government. Rates of support varied significantly, however, reaching just 48% in Poland and only about 51-52% in Spain and France, with Germany highest at 71%. More than one in five – 21% – would favour authoritarian rule under certain, unspecified circumstances. This was highest in Italy at 24% and lowest in Germany with 15%. In France, Spain and Poland the figure was 23%. Nearly one in 10 across the nations said they did not care whether their government was democratic or not, while another 14% did not know or did not answer. Thorsten Faas, a political scientist at Berlin's Free University, who worked on the study, said: 'Among people who see themselves as politically to the right of centre and feel economically disadvantaged, their support of democracy sinks to just one in three. 'Democracy is under pressure, from within and without.' The study was carried out in April and May. More than 6,700 people between the ages of 16 and 26 in Britain, Germany, France, Spain, Italy, Greece and Poland responded to the ninth annual survey by the YouGov institute for the Tui Foundation, which funds projects dedicated to youth in Europe. Forty-eight per cent worry that the democratic system in their own country is endangered, including 61% in Germany, where the economy – Europe's biggest – is ailing and the far right has made significant inroads, fuelled in part by increased backing from young voters. The return of Donald Trump to the White House, the rise of China, and Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine have shifted power away from Europe in the respondents' perception, with just 42% counting the EU among the top three global players. Despite – or perhaps because of – Brexit, the figure was highest among Britons at 50%. Of those surveyed in the UK, 73% wanted a return to the EU, while nearly half of young Europeans (47%) sought stronger ties between the EU and Britain. The US was seen by 83% as part of the power trio, followed by China with 75% and Russia on 57%. Rising polarisation is also driving young Europeans to the ideological fringes along with their elders, but a notable gender divide has emerged in the process. Nearly one in five – 19% – described themselves as politically right of centre, up from 14% in 2021, while 33% called themselves centrists, 32% as leftist and 16% without any designation. Women in Germany, France and Italy identified as progressive in higher numbers than four years ago, while young men in Poland and Greece have grown more conservative in the same period. Support for tougher restrictions on migration has grown across the board since 2021, to 38% from 26%. Most young Europeans expressed hope in the EU's potential, and two in three overwhelmingly supported their country remaining in the bloc if it still was. But 39% described the EU as not particularly democratic and just 6% said their own national governments worked well, with little need for significant changes. More than half – 53% – felt the EU was too focused on details and trivial matters. They would like the bloc to tackle the high cost of living, bolster defence against external threats and create better conditions for companies to improve the economy. Elke Hlawatschek, the head of the Tui Foundation, said: 'The European project, which has brought us peace, freedom of movement and economic progress for decades, is seen as unwieldy.' Greek people see the strongest need for fundamental overhaul of their political system and are most sceptical about the EU, which Faas described as rooted in enduring trauma of the eurozone debt crisis that drove their country's economy to the brink. Despite stronger support for climate protection among young Europeans, just one in three said it should take priority over economic growth. The figure has slipped from 44% in 2021.


The Guardian
17 hours ago
- The Guardian
The leaked phone call that could ring the changes for one of Thailand's most powerful dynasties
It was a call to someone she considered an old family friend. When Thai prime minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra picked up the phone to Hun Sen, the powerful former leader of neighbouring Cambodia, she was trying, she says, to ease tensions that had erupted over a border dispute. Instead their conversation, curiously published in full by Hun Sen himself after an initial clip was leaked, has sparked a fresh political crisis in Thailand that could signal the end of her premiership and significantly dent the position of her family, the powerful Shinawatras. It is also likely to usher in a new chapter of political uncertainty in a country prone to military coups and judicial warfare. On Tuesday, the constitutional court suspended Paetongtarn from office pending an ethics investigation, just days after 10,000 people took to the streets demanding her resignation. The leaked phone recording has caused outrage in Thailand, where Paetongtarn's critics feel she is, at best, too politically naive to protect her country's interests – and, at worst, a traitor. In the recording, Paetongtarn can be heard addressing Hun Sen as 'uncle', saying that if there were anything he wanted, she would 'take care of it' and criticising a senior Thai military commander. Paetongtarn, 38, had never served in government before she became prime minister less than a year ago. She took office only after after her predecessor Srettha Thavisin was disqualified by a court ruling. The Shinawatras – no stranger to street protests, punitive court rulings or even military interventions – have weathered many political storms before. The family's patriarch, former leader Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted in a coup in 2006, has remained one of Thailand's most influential, and controversial politicians, even after spending more than 15 years in self-imposed exile. But Paetongtarn, Thailand's youngest prime minister, took office at an especially difficult moment, presiding over an unlikely coalition formed after her father struck a Faustian bargain a year earlier, through which his party joined with his old enemies to form a government. The controversial arrangement was mutually beneficial, allowing conservatives to keep a new threat – the youthful pro-reform Move Forward party – out of office. Thaksin, who had been in self-imposed exile to avoid corruption charges, returned to the country without spending as much as 24 hours in prison. Still the uproar this week has sparked questions about whether the latest crisis could mark the final chapter for the powerful Shinawatra dynasty. 'I think the elite have become more and more confident that they might not have to rely on Thaksin any more,' says Pavin Chachavalpongpun, professor at the Center for Southeast Asian Studies at Kyoto University. 'Paetongtarn will eventually be overthrown in whichever way … they have run out of representatives from the Shinawatra dynasty,' Pavin says. Even if other relatives step forward, in his view 'Thai people have had enough'. Paetongtarn is now the fourth in her family to be prime minister, but over the years she has witnessed her family's power wax and wane. As a student, Paetongtarn lived through Yellow Shirts protests that rallied against her father and eventually forced him from power. Later, in 2008, Thaksin's brother-in-law Somchai Wongsawat was prime minister briefly, but was dismissed by a court ruling. Thaksin's sister, Yingluck Shinawatra, who served as prime minister from 2011-2014, was also removed by a court order, followed by a coup, in 2014. Many of the protest leaders who rallied against Paetongtarn on Saturday are veteran activists who once rallied against her relatives. The focus of the anti-Paetongtarn protests is, however, different from those in the past. 'There are legitimate reasons for staging a protest to insist on the prime minister stepping down,' said Dr Napon Jatusripitak, visiting fellow at ISEAS – Yusof Ishak Institute. 'But of course, in a political context like Thailand, protests take on a life of their own.' There is concern that if rallies escalate and become unmanageable, they could be used as a pretext for a military coup – though most analysts do not consider this to be an immediate threat. There are other steps that could be taken to permanently oust Paetongtarn or protect elite interests, including the filing of court cases. 'At this stage, the conservative establishment hasn't exhausted all its options. We haven't yet gone through the full circle of protests, judicial interventions yet,' said Napon. The same day that Paetongtarn was suspended, her father Thaksin also appeared in court to face lese majesty allegations. Thaksin had likely hoped the case, which relates to comments he made to South Korean media in a 2015 interview, had gone away. Thaksin first rose to power in 2001, and developed a loyal support base among voters in the country's poorer, rural north-east after offering policies that improved livelihoods. But he was loathed by the military royalist establishment, and a long-running power struggle between the two sides has led to a cycle of protests, military and court interventions ever since. Even before the current crisis, Pheu Thai, the party founded by Thaksin, was already struggling to deliver on its election promises, while its decision to make a deal with its old enemies threatened its credibility. In the short term, deputy prime minister, Suriya Juangroongruangkit, has taken over as caretaker while the constitutional court considers the case against Paetongtarn. Wanwichit Boonprong, political scientist at Rangsit University, said the Pheu Thai-led government will seek to do 'everything to prevent the dissolution of parliament because the government party is not ready to run in the election'. Even if Paetongtarn survives the constitutional court investigation, other bodies including the anti corruption agency, may launch their own inquiries. Protest groups may also continue their rallies. Paetongtarn is, said Wanwichit, considered 'politically bankrupt'. It is unclear what happens next – and whether Thaksin will be able to strike a deal. And the family's old-friend-turned foe, Hun Sen, may also continue to cause trouble from across the border. He has previously threatened to 'expose' comments made to him by Thaksin, which he claims include insults to Thailand's powerful monarchy. The details of such remarks, if indeed they do exist, is yet to be seen. 'If you act arrogantly, I will expose everything you told me,' he said.