logo
Thai PM apologises as crisis threatens to topple government

Thai PM apologises as crisis threatens to topple government

The Sun6 hours ago

BANGKOK: Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra apologised on Thursday for a leaked phone call with former Cambodian leader Hun Sen that has provoked widespread anger and put her government on the brink of collapse.
Her main coalition partner has quit and she faces calls to resign or hold an election, throwing the kingdom into a fresh round of political instability as it seeks to boost its spluttering economy and avoid US President Donald Trump's swingeing trade tariffs.
The conservative Bhumjaithai party pulled out on Wednesday, saying Paetongtarn's conduct in the leaked call had wounded the country and the army's dignity.
As pressure grew on Thursday, Paetongtarn apologised at a news conference alongside military chiefs and senior figures from her Pheu Thai party.
'I would like to apologise for the leaked audio of my conversation with a Cambodian leader which has caused public resentment,' Paetongtarn told reporters.
The 38-year-old is the daughter of billionaire Thaksin Shinawatra, Thailand's most influential but controversial modern politician.
Paetongtarn is heard in the call discussing an ongoing border dispute with Hun Sen, who still holds wide powers in Cambodia despite leaving office in 2023.
She addresses the veteran leader as 'uncle' and refers to the Thai army commander in the country's northeast as her opponent, a remark that sparked fierce criticism on social media.
The Thai foreign ministry summoned the Cambodian ambassador on Thursday to deliver a letter complaining about the leaking of the call.
The loss of Bhumjaithai's 69 MPs left Paetongtarn with barely enough votes to scrape a majority in parliament and a snap election looks a clear possibility -- barely two years after the last one in May 2023.
Two other coalition parties, the United Thai Nation and the Democrat Party, will hold meetings to discuss the situation later Thursday.
Paetongtarn will be hoping her apology and public show of unity with the military are enough to persuade them to stay on board.
Losing either would likely mean the end of her government and either an election or a bid by other parties to stitch together a new coalition.
Resignation calls
Thailand's military said in a statement that army chief General Pana Claewplodtook 'affirms commitment to democratic principles and national sovereignty protection'.
'The Chief of Army emphasised that the paramount imperative is for 'Thai people to stand united' in collectively defending national sovereignty,' it said.
Thailand's armed forces have long played a powerful role in the kingdom's politics and politicians are usually careful not to antagonise them.
Thailand has suffered a dozen coups since the end of absolute monarchy in 1932, and the current crisis has inevitably triggered rumours that another may be in the offing.
Such an outcome would make Paetongtarn the third member of her family, after her aunt Yingluck and father Thaksin, to be kicked out of office by the military.
The main opposition People's Party, which won the most seats in 2023 but was blocked by conservative senators from forming a government, urged Paetongtarn to call an election.
'What happened yesterday was a leadership crisis that destroyed people's trust,' People's Party leader Natthaphong Ruengpanyawut said in a statement.
The Palang Pracharath party, which led the government up to 2023, said the leaked recording showed Paetongtarn was weak and inexperienced, incapable of managing the country's security.
Hundreds of anti-government protesters, some of them veterans of the royalist, anti-Thaksin 'Yellow Shirt' movement of the late 2000s, demonstrated outside Government House on Thursday demanding that Paetongtarn quit.
Awkward coalition
Paetongtarn came to power in August 2024 at the head of an uneasy coalition between Pheu Thai and a group of conservative, pro-military parties whose members have spent much of the past 20 years battling against her father.
Growing tensions within the coalition erupted into open warfare in the past week as Pheu Thai tried to take the interior minister's job away from Bhumjaithai leader Anutin Charnvirakul.
The battle between the conservative pro-royal establishment and Thaksin's political movement has dominated recent Thai politics.
Former Manchester City owner Thaksin, 75, still enjoys huge support from the rural base whose lives he transformed with populist policies in the early 2000s.
But he is despised by Thailand's powerful elites, who saw his rule as corrupt, authoritarian and socially destabilising.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

United Thai Nation Party holds off on coalition decision, seeks talks with PM Paetongtarn first
United Thai Nation Party holds off on coalition decision, seeks talks with PM Paetongtarn first

The Star

time2 hours ago

  • The Star

United Thai Nation Party holds off on coalition decision, seeks talks with PM Paetongtarn first

BANGKOK: United Thai Nation Party to hold talks with Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra before deciding whether to withdraw from government coalition. Pirapan Salirathavibhaga, party leader and Energy Minister, made a brief statement after the party's executive committee meeting regarding the leaked audio clip of a conversation between Paetongtarn and Cambodian Senate President Hun Sen. He said, "The meeting has decided that I will report this to the Prime Minister," before walking past the group of reporters and heading to his car. The meeting was attended by only nine members of the party's executive committee. - Photo: The Nation/ANN Notably, members of the "Group 18" faction, led by Suchart Chomklin, Deputy Leader of the Party and Deputy Commerce Minister, were not invited to attend. The United Thai Nation Party's position is to withdraw from the government coalition, though there is some confusion about the exact meaning of this decision. There are two interpretations of the resolution: - The party's stance is for Prime Minister Paetongtarn to resign to take responsibility. This means that the party would notify her of the decision for her to step down, but would continue supporting the Pheu Thai-led government if a new prime minister is appointed. If Paetongtarn refuses to resign, the party will hold another meeting to decide on its next course of action. - Photo: The Nation/ANN - The party's resolution is to withdraw from the coalition and also inform the Prime Minister of the decision for her to resign, regardless of whether she agrees to step down or not. The party will hold a press conference tomorrow to announce its withdrawal from the government. However, the delay in immediately announcing the resolution suggests that the first option or approach is more likely. Alternatively, if the second approach is adopted, the party may use the withdrawal resolution to pressure the Prime Minister into resigning. If she does step down, discussions for forming a new government could resume; if not, the party will proceed with its withdrawal. - The Nation/ANN

Thai PM Paetongtarn faces political collapse after leaked phone call scandal
Thai PM Paetongtarn faces political collapse after leaked phone call scandal

The Star

time5 hours ago

  • The Star

Thai PM Paetongtarn faces political collapse after leaked phone call scandal

BANGKOK: Thailand's government teetered on the brink of collapse after a leaked audio recording of Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra criticising the country's military provoked the withdrawal of support from a key party in her ruling coalition amid growing calls for her resignation. The exit of the conservative Bhumjaithai Party, which holds 69 seats in the 500-member lower house, leaves the Pheu Thai Party-led government controlling just 261 seats in parliament, as more parties in the coalition held urgent meetings on Thursday (June 19) to decide whether to join the exodus. Any further defections could tip the Paetongtarn administration into minority government; some political analysts have already written her position off as untenable. Paetongtarn appeared to dig in during a hastily convened press conference on June 19, where she issued a public apology and urged the Thai people to unite in the face of what she described as a 'threat to national security' after her phone conversation with Cambodian Senate President Hun Sen on June 15 surfaced online. In the 17-minute call, which was uploaded to Hun's Facebook page on June 18, Paetongtarn is heard urging the former Cambodian leader to help resolve a renewed outbreak of border tensions between the two South-east Asian nations that she said was proving damaging to her government. Addressing Hun Sen, the father of current Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet, as 'uncle', she appeared to blame the Thai army for inflaming tensions and referred to them as 'the opposite side'. She also urged Hun Sen to ignore comments from a firebrand Thai general whom she said merely wanted to 'appear cool'. She said later that her words were merely part of a 'negotiation tactic'. 'I must apologise for what happened as I really didn't know the conversation was being recorded,' she said at the press conference, flanked by ministers and senior army commanders, adding that the call had been made from her private phone. 'From now on, I'll be more careful with my words.' Paetongtarn said the Thai government had registered a diplomatic protest with Phnom Penh over the leak. 'No one would record such a personal conversation and release it like this. It is unacceptable,' she said. While the situation remains fluid, political analysts said the scandal had shaken political trust and soured public sentiment towards an already unpopular leader to such an extent she was unlikely to survive as prime minister. 'It is the PM's grave mistake to ignore the protocol by having a private phone call with Hun Sen on an unsecured line,' said Dr Panitan Wattanayagorn, a political scientist and former government adviser. There were no good options remaining for Paetongtarn, Dr Panitan said. She could either step down to make way for another candidate to take over, or run the gauntlet of an early election by dissolving parliament, he said. Coming just 10 months into her term, the potential for a fresh wave of political turmoil and leadership changes comes at an inopportune time, with Thailand battling to revive its stagnant economy while staving off the threat of US President Donald Trump's trade tariffs. Paetongtarn, the 38-year-old daughter of influential billionaire and former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, had not held any political office before becoming Thailand's youngest prime minister in August 2024 after the removal of her predecessor by a court order. She assumed power at the head of an uneasy post-election coalition with a clutch of pro-military parties, part of the conservative establishment whose distrust and rivalry with Thaksin's political movement has dominated Thailand's political landscape for much of the past two decades. The fragile alliance had been under growing strain due to mounting legal pressure on Thaksin following his return from 15 years in self-imposed exile as well as factional infighting. The latter erupted into public view after an attempt by Pheu Thai to strip Bhumjaithai Party leader Anutin Charnvirakul of the interior minister position in a cabinet reshuffle. Paetongtarn's popularity had already been tested by pressure over her management of Thailand's lacklustre economy, a resurgent opposition as well as long-held perceptions of the political influence her father, who has no official title but remains outspoken on policy matters, wields over her. Pro-military voices had also seized on what they considered to be her overly gentle diplomatic approach to the territorial spat after a Cambodian soldier was killed during a brief exchange of gunfire at a disputed border area between the two countries on May 28, fanning nationalist sentiments on both sides. Cambodia said on June 15 that it had formally submitted a request for the International Court of Justice to resolve its territorial row with Thailand after bilateral talks were inconclusive. 'This is by far the biggest crisis that Paetongtarn's administration has faced,' said Dr Prinya Thaewanarumitkul, director of the Law Centre at Thammasat University. 'The Pheu Thai Party might still have had a chance to retain the stability of the government even after the Bhumjaithai Party left the coalition. But after the leaking of the Prime Minister's conversation with Hun Sen, the situation is greatly worsened.' Thailand's armed forces have long played a prominent role in the country's politics, with the kingdom experiencing a dozen military coups since the 1930s, including toppling the governments of both Thaksin and his sister Yingluck Shinawatra in 2006 and 2014 respectively. The centre-left main opposition People's Party said Ms Paetongtarn had 'completely lost' the confidence of the people by portraying the Thai army as the enemy. Opposition leader Natthaphong Ruengpanyawut called on her to dissolve parliament to take responsibility for the damage caused and stave off any potential repeat of a military coup. 'While current public sentiment may lead to the setting up of pressure groups to gather in front of Government House or other places, people should be reminded that a military coup is not the answer,' he said on June 19. 'We must not let emotions push society beyond the bounds of democracy.' - The Straits Times/ANN

Thai-Cambodian border closure has limited impact on Thailand: Agriculture Ministry
Thai-Cambodian border closure has limited impact on Thailand: Agriculture Ministry

The Star

time5 hours ago

  • The Star

Thai-Cambodian border closure has limited impact on Thailand: Agriculture Ministry

BANGKOK: The closure of the Thai-Cambodian border has impacted Cambodia's annual cassava exports worth 9 billion baht, while Thailand's vegetable exports remain insignificant. Agriculture and Cooperatives Minister Narumon Pinyosinwat said on Thursday (June 19) that the border closure had little impact on Thailand, citing the Office of Agricultural Economics. This projection was based on Thailand's limited exports to Cambodia, most of which are non-agricultural goods, she explained. Narumon noted that the primary impact would be on Cambodia, as Thailand imports approximately 9 billion baht worth of cassava from Cambodia to supply raw materials for its industries. However, if the situation in Cambodia worsens, Thailand will source cassava from other regions, such as Laos, or substitute with other agricultural products. Discussions with the Commerce Ministry are ongoing. 'I want to reassure the public and farmers that the issue will not significantly affect the agricultural sector. Only some farmers in specific areas may be directly impacted, and I have instructed the relevant agencies to monitor the situation and provide assistance,' she said. Narumon added that seasonal vegetables and fruits that may be affected by the border closure have been coordinated with modern trade groups to purchase and redistribute them. The Agriculture Ministry has already begun this process, with the Cooperative Promotion Department buying some products itself. Next week, discussions will be held with the Board of Trade of Thailand and the Federation of Thai Industries to find further ways to assist farmers. The key priority at this moment is national unity, she emphasised. 'Exports through Cambodia mainly involve vegetables worth around 100,000 baht, which is not significant. Going forward, we may need to adjust transport routes and consider shipping by sea, which could increase costs, but we must adapt,' she said. 'As for eastern fruits, the season is nearing its end, so the impact is minimal. Even if the border remains closed for 6 to 12 months, I can assure you there will be no major impact on agriculture,' she added. Narumon concluded that the Agriculture Ministry is not blocking imports and is not responding to political negotiations, which fall under the responsibility of the Defence Ministry. However, as agricultural goods are involved in the trade, the Agriculture Ministry has asked the Office of Agricultural Economics to analyse the situation and find ways to mitigate any impact on Thai farmers. With the analysis showing minimal impact, she hopes all parties can feel reassured. Nonetheless, further discussions with the Commerce Ministry will continue to form a coordinated overall strategy. - The Nation/ANN

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store