Yahoo – AFP,
25 Aug 2014
Bangkok
(AFP) - Thailand's coup leader was formally endorsed as prime minister by the
nation's revered king on Monday, in a step towards forming a government to
oversee sweeping reforms in the politically turbulent kingdom.
Army chief
General Prayut Chan-O-Cha, 60, who booted out an elected government in a
bloodless power grab on May 22, was chosen uncontested as premier last week by
a national assembly made up mainly of military figures.
In a brief
but elaborate ceremony to receive the royal command, Prayut -- wearing a white
official uniform -- knelt and bowed in front of large portrait of King Bhumibol
Adulyadej.
"His
majesty the king has appointed me Prime Minister. I am extremely grateful...
this is a great honour for me and my family," Prayut said after the
ceremony.
"I
will work with honesty and for the benefit of people and the nation," he
added.
The top
general, who was endorsed as premier on Sunday but was officially given the
royal command a day later, will also remain head of the junta as the military
appears to tighten its grip on power.
A junta
spokesman said Prayut will pick a cabinet and propose ministers for the king's
approval in September.
The junta,
formally known as the National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO), says it was
forced to take power after months of protests left nearly 30 people dead and
hundreds more wounded, paralysing the government, cramping the economy and
frightening off tourists.
It has
ruled out holding new elections before October 2015, despite international
appeals for a return to democracy, vowing first to oversee reforms aimed at
cleaning up politics and society.
Critics say
the protests provided a pretext for the power grab from the former government,
which was led by Yingluck Shinawatra until shortly before the May 22 coup.
Prayut,
whose term as army chief finishes at the end of September, is seen as a staunch
opponent of Yingluck's brother, fugitive former premier Thaksin Shinawatra,
whose overthrow in an earlier coup in 2006 triggered Thailand's long-running
political crisis.
Thaksin is
reviled by much of Thailand's Bangkok-based royalist elite, but draws deep
loyalty from the poor, but populous northern portion of the country.
His parties
have won every election since 2001 -- even though the billionaire
policeman-turned-businessman fled Thailand in 2008 to avoid jail for a
corruption conviction.
Rights
groups have condemned the junta for smothering dissent since seizing power.
Protests
are banned under martial law while hundreds of activists and political
opponents were summoned by the military after the coup -- although most were
released within days.
The United
Nation's last week also expressed alarm at a number of arrests and stiff jail
sentences meted out since the coup for defaming Thailand's monarchy.
King
Bhumibol Adulyadej, 86, is revered by many Thais and protected by tough defamation
laws that carry a maximum jail sentence of 15 years for each conviction.


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