Thai PM faces legal tests after averting coalition collapse

Thai PM faces legal tests after averting coalition collapse

The National Anti-Corruption Commission will probe Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra’s controversial phone call with ex-Cambodian leader Hun Sen.

Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra said a revamped cabinet lineup has been finalised and new candidates will be vetted this week. (EPA Images pic)
BANGKOK:
Thailand’s anti-graft agency will probe Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra’s controversial phone call with ex-Cambodian leader Hun Sen, according to local media reports, as her rivals seek legal recourse to force her ouster.

The National Anti-Corruption Commission’s decision today to launch a preliminary investigation against the embattled leader came in response to a petition by senate speaker Mongkol Surasajja, Bangkok Post reported, without saying where it got the information.

The petitioners wanted the agency to determine if the prime minister committed corruption by willfully violating the constitution or laws, or seriously breached ethical standards, the report said.

The constitutional court is set to meet on July 1, and will likely consider a similar plea asking if Paetongtarn should be removed from office for ethical breaches.

Ruangkrai Leekitwattana, a political activist, has also petitioned the Election Commission to investigate the leaked audio recording in which the prime minister appeared critical of the army amid a simmering border standoff with Cambodia.

Thailand has seen several past leaders ousted either by court orders or through military coups.

Paetongtarn’s immediate predecessor Srettha Thavisin was dismissed by the constitutional court for an ethical breach, and governments run by two of her family members were removed during military coups.

Paetongtarn remained unfazed by the legal challenges.

“I’m ready to support with any information or clarification needed,” Paetongtarn told reporters today.

“As the audio recording showed, I didn’t gain anything from it and I didn’t cause the country any losses either. It was a private conversation that shouldn’t have been shared,” Paetongtarn said.

The 38-year-old prime minister, the third member of the influential Shinawatra clan to lead Thailand, has rejected calls to quit following the crisis sparked by the leaked phone call.

The episode caused the conservative Bhumjaithai Party to quit her coalition, reducing its majority to about 255 seats in the 495-member parliament.

Paetongtarn said a revamped cabinet lineup has been finalised and new candidates will be vetted this week.

The reshuffle is set to reward smaller parties that still pledge to support her government, with an ex-general expected to be named the new defense minister, according to media reports.

The move was made possible by the exit of eight Bhumjaithai ministers last week in the wake of the phone scandal and disagreement over the planned reshuffle.

The barrage of legal challenges and threats of fresh public protests may sour investor sentiment toward Thai assets, which are already under pressure from the prospect of the lowest economic growth since the pandemic.

The economy is being hobbled by the region’s highest household debt and the looming threat of a punitive 36% tariff on exports to the US.

The anti-graft agency has set a deadline of 10 days to complete its preliminary probe.

If it finds sufficient grounds, the Board of Commissioners may launch a full-panel investigation into the case, the Nation reported.

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