Thailand's Constitutional Court has dismissed caretaker Prime Minister
Yingluck Shinawatra from office, ruling that she is guilty of violating
the country's constitution for reassigning a senior security official in
2011."The defendant has abused her position as prime minister," said the judge in the ruling. "Her prime ministership has ... ended."The court ruled that nine cabinet ministers who attended a meeting over
the decision to transfer the official were also to be removed from
office.
Deputy PM and Commerce
Minister Niwatthamrong Boonsongpaisan has been nominated by the cabinet
as the next caretaker prime minister, Secretary General to the Prime
Minister, Suranand Vejjajiva, told CNN.
Yingluck's dismissal,
which analysts say will only deepen Thailand's protracted political
crisis, was brought about by a lawsuit filed by anti-government
senators. They accused Yingluck of abusing her power by unlawfully
transferring National Security Council chief Thawil Pliensri from his
role in September 2011, alleging the move was intended to benefit her
Pheu Thai Party and a family member.Thawil was replaced by
the then national police chief, whose role in turn was later given to
Priewpan Damapong, a relative of Yingluck.In March, Thailand's Supreme Administrative Court ruled the transfer unlawful and Thawil was reinstated.
In the wake of the court's ruling, Yingluck thanked her cabinet ministers, government officials and supporters."It's been two years,
nine months and two days that I worked as prime minister and every day
of those two years, nine months and two days was a proud day," she said.
"I will always stand by the people."'More protests and dysfunction'Analyst Paul Quaglia,
director at PQA Associates, a Bangkok-based risk assessment firm, said
the development set the scene for "more protests and more dysfunction in
the days ahead.""Her supporters will
look at this as what they call a judicial coup, which is one of the red
lines they've drawn about all of this," he said.
He said the case against
Yingluck were "pretty weak," and that abuse of power was a "pretty
grandiose term to describe what went on.""What she is accused of
doing is approving the removal of a military officer from a civil
servant's job in 2011. This is pretty routine," he said. "Her supporters
of course will view this as a technical pretext by the court simply to
get rid of her and get rid of this government."For the "yellow shirt"
political bloc opposed to Yingluck, who came to office in a landslide
win in 2011, her ouster would be a welcome cause for celebration, he
said.
"It was the last stop on
the track for them -- the army had refused to get into it, to stage a
coup. They hadn't won any other battles, so it falls to the judiciary to
get the job done to get rid of this elected government."
Yingluck defended
herself against the charges in court Tuesday. "I didn't do anything
against the law," she said. "I have performed my duty in the
administration with the intention of benefiting the country."Yingluck had led a
caretaker administration since parliament was dissolved in December,
ahead of a general election in February that was disrupted by
anti-government protesters. The Constitutional Court subsequently ruled the election invalid.The protests had been
sparked in November by Yingluck's government's botched attempt to pass
an amnesty bill that would have paved the way for the return of her
brother -- the polarizing former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra -- to
the political fray in earnest.
Military coup
Thaksin, a
telecommunications tycoon, was overthrown in a military coup in 2006 and
has since lived in self-imposed exile to avoid a corruption conviction,
which he says is politically motivated. The anti-government protesters,
drawn mainly from Bangkok's middle class, royalist establishment,
allege that Yingluck is her brother's puppet and seek to rid Thai
politics of her family's influence.
In contrast, the "red
shirt" supporters of Yingluck and her brother, many of whom are poor and
hail mainly from rural areas in the north of the country, accuse the
court of bias against their side. Thaksin's Thai Rak Thai political
party was dissolved by the court in 2007.
Observers are now
watching how both camps, who have large rallies planned in the capital
over the coming week, respond to the verdict. Political tensions have
occasionally spilled over into deadly violence during the current
crisis.
"For the first time in
Thailand's history of political discord, we have opposing camps
threatening to stage demonstrations in relative proximity to each other
in Bangkok," said Quaglia. "We could see some trouble, frankly."He said the government
had been "dealt a blow, but not a fatal blow" by the court. Under the
caretaker administration, key infrastructure projects and policy
decisions had already been placed on hold until after elections
scheduled for July 20.
"We are headed one way
or another towards elections at some point. I don't know how peaceful
those elections will be or what the landscape will look like between now
and July 20," he said.
Yingluck's opponents
have campaigned against elections, arguing the alleged corruption of
their political rivals meant that widespread reforms were necessary
before any meaningful vote could be held, said Quaglia. Anti-government
protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban, a former deputy prime minister for the
Democrat Party, has called for power to be transferred to an unelected
"people's council."
"The Pheu Thai Party ...
want to have elections. They know they will win those elections. Their
opponents, the Democrat Party, say 'No, we can't have elections,'
because they know they will lose those elections. Therein lies the rub,"
said Quaglia.Yingluck also faces a charge brought by the National Anti-Corruption Commission over a controversial state rice-buying scheme. The commission's ruling is expected this month.
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