
Thai court suspends PM from duty pending leaked call case deliberation
BANGKOK (July 1): Thailand's Constitutional Court on Tuesday suspended Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra from duty pending deliberation of a case involving her controversial leaked phone call with Cambodia's leader, Hun Sen.
In a statement, the court said it had accepted a petition from 36 senators accusing Paetongtarn of dishonesty and breaching ethical standards in violation of the constitution.
The Constitutional Court judges unanimously agreed to accept the petition and voted 7–2 to suspend Paetongtarn from performing her duties.
'The court unanimously resolved to accept the petition for consideration, notify the petitioner and allow the respondent to submit a defence within 15 days of receiving a copy of the petition,' the court said.
Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Transport Suriya Jungrungreangkit will assume the role of acting prime minister while the court decides the case against Paetongtarn.
During a 15 June phone call with veteran Cambodian politician Hun Sen, Paetongtarn reportedly discussed an ongoing border dispute. She allegedly blamed miscommunication by her own military and referred to a prominent Thai military commander at the border as 'the opposite side.'
The leaked phone call was confirmed as authentic by both Hun Sen and Paetongtarn. Paetongtarn was heard addressing the Cambodian leader as 'uncle' during the conversation.
Earlier Tuesday, Paetongtarn reshuffled her Cabinet following the departure of a key coalition partner and vacancies in ministerial portfolios.
King Maha Vajiralongkorn endorsed the Cabinet reshuffle, with the new line-up set to take an oath of office on July 3.
In the new Cabinet line-up published in the Royal Gazette, there are 14 new appointments, while six ministers have been reassigned to new portfolios. – Bernama Court leaked phone call Paetongtarn Shinawatra Thailand

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The Star
44 minutes ago
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Thai veteran politician set for single day as acting PM
Thailand's acting Prime minister Suriya Jungrungreangkit arriving at the Government House in Bangkok on July 2, 2025. - AFP BANGKOK: Thailand's acting prime minister is set to helm the country for only one full day Wednesday (July 2), standing in for suspended premier Paetongtarn Shinawatra before being replaced himself in a cabinet reshuffle. Transport minister and deputy prime minister Suriya Jungrungreangkit began his engagements by attending a ceremony in Bangkok celebrating the longevity of the prime minister's office. The event marks the 93rd anniversary of an institution Suriya is set to command for far fewer than 93 hours as Thailand reels from the suspension of Paetongtarn, heiress of the country's dominant political dynasty. The Constitutional Court said Tuesday there was "sufficient cause to suspect" she breached ministerial ethics during a diplomatic spat with Cambodia, suspending her pending a probe that could last months. The 38-year-old Paetongtarn is the daughter of political heavyweight Thaksin Shinawatra, whose family and party have been jousting with Thailand's conservative establishment since the early 2000s. Power immediately passed to 70-year-old Suriya, a veteran operator with a reputation in Thai media as a political weathervane for always aligning himself with the government of the day. But his time as acting premier is set to be cut short by a cabinet reshuffle already scheduled before Tuesday's court bombshell. When it takes effect in an oath-swearing ceremony scheduled on Thursday, Suriya is set to be superseded by incoming interior minister Phumtham Wechayachai. Phumtham is set to supersede caretaker Prime Minister Wechayachai Suriya once he is sworn in as Interior Minister on July 3. - AFP The ruling Pheu Thai party said late Tuesday that Phumtham will take over after the cabinet reshuffle because he will receive a deputy prime minister title that is higher in the order of succession than Suriya. Paetongtarn -- who became prime minister only last August -- assigned herself the culture minister position in the new cabinet before she was suspended, meaning she is set to keep a perch in the upper echelons of power. But analysts say her pause from office represents a dramatic waning of the Shinawatras' influence. Tuesday also saw the second day of Thaksin's criminal trial for royal defamation, in which he faces a possible 15-year sentence if convicted. Paetongtarn has been hobbled over a longstanding territorial dispute between Thailand and Cambodia, which boiled over into cross-border clashes in May, killing one Cambodian soldier. When she made a diplomatic call to Cambodian ex-leader Hun Sen she called him "uncle" and referred to a Thai military commander as her "opponent", according to a leaked recording causing widespread backlash. A conservative party abandoned her ruling coalition -- sparking the cabinet reshuffle -- while her approval rating plunged and thousands mustered to protest over the weekend. Conservative lawmakers accused her of kowtowing to Cambodia and undermining the military, entering a case with the Constitutional Court alleging she breached the constitution's ministerial ethics code. - AFP


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44 minutes ago
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The tensions with Cambodia that led to the suspension of Thailand's prime minister
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In the call, the two were heard talking through a translator discussing the tensions at the border, and about whether they should lift restrictions imposed after the deadly clash. Paetongtarn could be heard addressing Hun Sen as uncle. He is a longtime friend of her father, Thaksin Shinawatra, a popular but divisive former Prime Minister. She urged him not to listen to a Thai regional army commander who had publicly criticised Cambodia about the border dispute, and called him "an opponent.' She also told Hun Sen to let her know what he wanted, and she would try to manage that. Critics said she went too far in appeasing Hun Sen, and that what she said, especially her comments about the army commander, damaged Thailand's interests and image. Paetongtarn has apologised but said she didn't do any damage to Thailand, arguing that her comments were a negotiating tactic. The recent dispute was triggered in May after armed forces of Thailand and Cambodia briefly fired at each other in a relatively small contested border area that both countries claim as their own. Both sides have said they acted in self-defence. One Cambodian soldier was killed. While the countries said afterwards they have agreed to de-escalate the situation, Cambodian and Thai authorities continue to implement or threaten measures short of armed force, keeping tensions high. Thailand has added tight restrictions at its border with Cambodia that stopped almost all crossings in and out of Thailand except for students, medical patients and others with essential needs. Cambodia has banned Thai movies and TV shows, stopped the import of Thai fruits and vegetables and boycotted some of its neighbour's international internet links and power supply. It also stopped importing fuel from Thailand. Border disputes are long-standing issues that have caused periodic tensions between the two neighbous. Thailand and Cambodia share more than 800 kilometres of land border. The contesting claims stem largely from a 1907 map drawn under French colonial rule that was used to separate Cambodia from Thailand. Cambodia has been using the map as a reference to claim territory, while Thailand has argued the map is inaccurate. In February, Cambodian troops and their family members entered an ancient temple along the border in one of the disputed areas and sang the Cambodian national anthem, leading to a brief argument with Thai troops. The most prominent and violent conflicts broke out around the 1,000-year-old Preah Vihear temple. In 1962, the International Court of Justice awarded sovereignty over the area to Cambodia and that became a major irritant in relations. 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Tensions have soared as they engaged in a war of words that appeared intended to mollify nationalistic critics on both sides of the border. The ill feeling between the two neighbours is not just about overlapping border claims, but also deep-seated cultural enmity that has its roots from centuries ago, when they were large and competing empires. In more modern times, bad feelings have lingered, as Cambodia's development, hindered by French colonialism and, in the 1970s, the brutal rule of the communist Khmer Rouge, has fallen well behind Thailand. Both have fought over claims on cultural products ranging from boxing, mask dancing, traditional clothing and food. - AP


The Star
44 minutes ago
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Thai leader's suspension deals new blow to battered economy
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The military and pro-military political parties were the key forces behind Paetongtarn's eventual ascension to power after a key opposition party couldn't secure enough support to form a government following national elections two years ago. That uneasy alliance paved the way for Paetongtarn's father, Thaksin Shinawatra, to return from a long exile. Even with the court's suspension, Paetongtarn isn't totally sidelined from power. Hours before the ruling Tuesday, she was named culture minister in a reshuffle expected to keep her in government. The new cabinet will be sworn in Thursday. But the damage may be permanent. A recent poll showed Paetongtarn's approval rating at 9.2 per cent. Thousands have protested, calling for her resignation. Paetongtarn said Tuesday she accepts the court's ruling but gave little clarity on her future. "I'm still a Thai citizen,' she said. "I will continue to work for the country while my duties are suspended.' Even so, fears are growing the government could collapse before the next budget passes. The 2026 fiscal plan, due by August, is at risk. Burin Adulwattana, chief economist at Kasikorn Research Centre, said a lame-duck government would add uncertainty, hurting the baht and stocks. "A key impact will be felt if the political turmoil leads to a budget delay,' he said. "Without it, the economy will have big trouble.' The baht fell 0.1 per cent on Wednesday morning. The yield on Thailand's benchmark ten-year bonds was little changed after declining three basis points a day earlier. The benchmark stock index, the world's worst-performing major equity market globally this year, rallied 1.9 per cent Tuesday on expectations that Paetongtarn's suspension will help reduce political tension. Whether things play out that way is far from certain. "This suspension exerts further downside risk to a growth outlook already mired in uncertainty from US tariffs,' said Lavanya Venkateswaran an economist at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. in Singapore. "The real question is what next. That needs to be answered sooner rather than later considering the stakes.' If the court ultimately rules against Paetongtarn, she will be removed from office, triggering a parliamentary vote to pick a replacement from a list submitted before the 2023 election. Along with her father and aunt, Yingluck, Paetongtarn would be the third of the Shinawatra clan to be removed from office. Possible successors include the Pheu Thai party's Chaikasem Nitisiri, Bhumjaithai's Anutin Charnvirakul, United Thai Nation's Pirapan Salirathavibhaga, and the Democrat Party's Jurin Laksanawisit. Former Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha - who led the last coup - is also eligible. And while a military takeover is always possible in Thailand, frustration over the country's economic performance under Prayuth ultimately pressured his government to allow for elections. "The decision by the court today has heightened the coup risk a bit,' said Thitinan of Chulalongkorn University. But "the last time they had a coup, they did not do well.' - Bloomberg