Judges accept Yingluck’s plea, will make referral decision

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/politics/30320255

politics July 09, 2017 01:00

By The Sunday Nation

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Former prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra has requested a Constitutional Court interpretation of the new Constitution regarding a clause that may affect the ongoing trial of a Supreme Court case against her.

Yingluck on Friday asked the Supreme Court’s Criminal Division for Political Office Holders to seek a verdict from the Constitutional Court over the matter.

The ex-PM is being tried by the Supreme Court’s Criminal Division for Political Office Holders. She is accused of negligence for failing to stop irregularities stemming from her government’s rice-pledging scheme.

In her petition, she pointed out that Article 235 of the new charter requires the court to base its consideration based upon the inquiry file of the National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC). She said that this contradicted the 1999 law on the court’s procedures, which requires that the court mainly rely on the report by the relevant NACC committee.

The judges trying Yingluck’s case have accepted her petition for consideration. The court will make a decision as to whether to refer the matter to the Constitutional Court for an interpretation.

Institute denies claims it picks elite over those qualified for courses

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/politics/30320258

politics July 09, 2017 01:00

By THE SUNDAY NATION

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THE KING Prajadhipok’s Institute (KPI) has been accused of promoting networking among participants of its many courses that attract the political and business elite, as well as senior bureaucrats and other important people from many circles.

Critics have said that many participants in the institute’s courses were selected because of their status rather than their qualifications. They point out that those courses are often full of people who want to make personal gain through connections and networking.

The political reform committee of the National Reform Steering Assembly (NRSA) has called for a review of the KPI’s roles and duties, as well as a reform of its courses.

In its report presented to the NRSA, the panel suggested amendments to the 1998 law on the KPI to pave the way for the recommended reviews. With approval from the NRSA, the report will next be forwarded to the National Legislative Assembly.

The KPI has dismissed the allegations. In response to the criticism, the institute recently issued a statement denying that its courses were mainly aimed at building connections among participants.

The institute said it has many courses that encourage the improvement of local community leaders, the potential of participants in helping build a better society, and working for the public interest. Those are in addition to courses that promote moral values and self-improvement among the participants, it said.

“We would like to maintain that the King Prajadhipok’s Institute is firmly determined to truly provide knowledge for development of Thailand’s democracy,” the KPI said in its statement. The institute said that it has clear criteria in selecting participants of its training courses, and its committee members consist |mainly of experts.

The KPI has a total of 28 training courses mainly focusing on public administration, democracy, law and management. The number of course participants ranges from 70 to 140. The tuition fee for certain courses is high – up to Bt59,000 and Bt75,000 each.

Seree Suwanpanont, chairman of the NRSA’s political reform committee, said that despite its many years of existence, the KPI had failed to help improve the standard of Thai politics.

“Also, the institute’s structure is full of influential figures in parliamentary circles. So nobody want to bother with them, although there are a lot of problems. There are so many courses and most of them are used to build connections for the benefit of the participants,” he said.

The KPI, which is a unit under the Parliament, has been in operation since 1998. The report by Seree’s panel calls for different groups of people, such as politicians and senior bureaucrats, to be enrolled in separate courses, as a way to prevent them from building connections.

Thavinvadee Burikul, an executive member of the KPI and director of its research and development unit, said it was difficult to prevent participants from building up connections and networking, as it was their personal business. But she admitted that there were some weak points in the institute’s courses that needed to be rectified. She said the focus would be more on improving the participants’ awareness of the public interest and encouraging them to serve social causes. She said it was true that some participants were selected to attend the KPI’s courses because of their connections.

“But they need to be fully qualified and have to undergo an interview test in line with the institute’s regulations,” she said, adding that people from the same family were not allowed to attend the same course.

Political activist Sombat Boonngamanong, who attended a KPI course on peace building, said that networking among the participants does exist but he did not think that it was a serious problem.

He also said it was not a secret that some participants were selected because of their connections. To solve the problem, he suggested that the selection committee be truly transparent. The red-shirt activist backed KPI offering its courses to a wider group of people – and not just a limited group, as is the case today.

PM Prayut urges farmers to be strong in new poem

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/politics/30320247

politics July 08, 2017 18:05

By The Nation

“You are strong, tolerant, and have high integrity worth respecting.” These are the words Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha has used to cheer up farmers in the latest poem he has penned.

The poem urged them to not lose their morale or leave their homes. The government has been trying to solve their problems with its Pracha Rat (people’s state) policy and trusted that this was the way to get them out of trouble, the poem says.

The government would hurry to solve these issues as soon as possible, the “Farmers’ Soul Soothing Poem” reads.

PM Prayut penned his previous poem for his Cabinet just last week, aimed at boosting their morale by encouraging them to remain focused and work tirelessly for the people.

The poem urged them not to give up if they encountered struggles along the way when working for the people, and to use their wisdom instead to overcome problems.

“Be focused and correct things, one after another. People’s happiness is in our hands,” read the final lines of his morale-boosting verse.

The poem – titled “Morale for you, the Cabinet” – was the third of three recently written by the PM. He continued writing despite the fact that he had earlier said he would “rather keep his mouth shut” after his previous poems sparked a brief verbal tussle among established poets. The poets were split over the PM’s verse, and some appended new stanzas to his efforts.

Education, defence top budget

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/politics/30317580

politics June 09, 2017 01:00

By THE NATION

Govt’s 2018 outlays not a bid to prolong military’s grip on power, Prayut insists.

THE government’s Bt2.9-trillion budget for 2018 has massive spending of Bt575 billion for upgrading workers’ skills and education, plus related activities, while the Defence Ministry’s budget rises Bt8.8 billion to Bt222 billion.

Under the 2018 Budget Bill, passed in its first reading by the National Legislative Assembly yesterday, money allocated for tackling unrest in the country’s deep South also continued to rise to a total of about Bt13 billion. Meanwhile, the Navy is expected to get extra money to pay for its first Chinese-made submarine, worth Bt13.5 billion over a period of seven years.

The controversial submarine acquisition programme is estimated to be worth a total of Bt36 billion for three vessels to be delivered over a decade.

Besides human resource development and related activities, the budget for the 2018 fiscal year, starting on October 1, includes huge spending of Bt476 billion for national competitiveness and related schemes, while poverty reduction programmes and related expenditure will get Bt332 billion.

Bt273 billion is earmarked for security and related activities, while water resources, environmental protection and related spending will amount to Bt125 billion.

Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha said the budget was not formulated to prolong the military’s grip on power but it would allow the implementing of the national reform agenda.

That includes reducing social injustice and economic inequality as the economy is projected to grow 3.3 to 4.3 per cent in 2018.

Revenue collection is projected to total Bt2.45 trillion, resulting in a budget deficit of Bt450 billion. That means the government will have to borrow funds to cover the shortfall.

There are also plans to increase tax revenue, including the introduction of a new land and building tax, which is being considered by the NLA.

Earlier, the government also floated the idea of hiking the value-added tax rate from the current 7 per cent, but opponents said the timing was not suitable as the country’s economic growth rate is not yet favourable.

Overall, the Bt2.9-trillion budget bill for fiscal 2018 is relatively modest, including fixed expenditure of Bt2.15 trillion, investment projects worth Bt650 billion and public debt repayment of Bt86.9 billion. According to the premier, treasury reserves amounted to Bt182 billion as of May 26 this |year.

He said the budget for national security included spending on protecting key national institutions, national and political reconciliation, and solving prolonged insurgency problems in the far South.

Another key strategy is to increase competitiveness in manufacturing and industrial areas with a focus on helping small and medium enterprises and developing special economic zones.

The government will spend the most resources in education, healthcare, people’s skill development and related activities.

To reduce income inequality, the government will also spend significantly to boost the grassroots and rural economy, while providing welfare to people whose income is below the poverty line. In addition, Bt125 billion is earmarked for environmental protection, water resources management and related activities.

Drilling for oil spill

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/politics/30317570

 

politics June 08, 2017 18:31

By Watcharachai Klaipong
The Nation

The Royal Thai Navy,in collaboration with the private sector, practices an oil-recovery mission in the sea off Chon Buri’s Sattahhip district on Thurseday.

The drill was intended to boost relevant organisations’ ability to handle pollution in the event of an oil leak.

See more photo: http://http://www.nationmultimedia.com/photo/view/164

Backwater to boomtown: rural Thai city emerges as sporting Camelot

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

  • This photo taken on May 17, 2017 shows cars being prepared for the 2017 Blancpain GT series at Chang International Circuit, Thailand’s first FIA Grade 1 approved motorsport race track, in the northeastern Thai province of Buriram./AFP
  • This photo taken on May 17, 2017 shows 58-year-old former Thai MP, Newin Chidchob, during an interview at the Chang International Circuit in the northeastern Thai province of Buriram. /AFP
 

politics June 08, 2017 11:26

By Agence France-Presse
BURIRAM, Thailand

A ‘godfather’ of Thai politics is using cash and contacts to transform his once poor, forgotten rice-farming fiefdom into an unlikely sporting Camelot, complete with a football stadium and racetrack set to host the MotoGP.

Newin Chidchob, a 58-year-old native son of Buriram in Thailand’s agrarian northeast, has enticed super-rich investors into his vision of a sports hub amid the rice fields.

The swaggering former MP has already delivered two venues that now dominate Buriram, a sleepy town whose 30,000 population could be seated more than three times over in them.

First, in 2011, came the imposing ‘Thunder Castle’, a mega millions football stadium purpose-built for leading Thai Premier League side Buriram United.

It was followed three years later by a $58.9 million racing circuit, the first Formula One certified track in Thailand.

According to Thai sports authorities the circuit secured the rights this week to stage a leg of the prestigious 2018 MotoGP, a personal coup for Newin who has been lobbying hard to bring the event to his flagship venue.

The motorcycling extravaganza would pour millions of dollars into Buriram, which was once among Thailand’s poorest provinces.

“I wanted to create something that this country didn’t have,” Newin told AFP from the grandstand as GT race teams prepared for a recent competition.

“Now we’ve changed this town from being a place people pass through, from a city with no tourists, to one that now has around three million visitors a year.”

Thanks to the sporting makover, Buriram is a rare pocket of economic vibrancy in northeastern Thailand, a farming region whose development lags far behind Bangkok and the tourist destinations of the beach-streaked south.

Locals are the first to say that none of it would be possible without Newin, known by some as the ‘Baron of Buriram’.

“We never dreamed we would have these kind of stadiums,” said school teacher Janpen Pansri, one of many residents wearing the blue kit of Buriram’s football team.

“But whenever Newin announces he’s going to do something, he does it,” she added. “We all give our hearts to him.”

The Kingmaker

Much of Thailand is carved up into the domains of influential families who dominate local political and economic life.

Buriram is no different.

Patronage, power and ruthless decision-making have shaped Newin’s rise to the top.

Before making his mark with sport, Newin spent two decades in Thailand’s bear-pit political arena, trading favours and switching teams just in time to land on the winning side.

“It’s over boss,” he famously told his former friend, ex-premier Thaksin Shinawatra by phone in 2008 after throwing his weight behind the rival Democrats — a mercenary move that earned him the moniker “The Kingmaker”.

Newin was later banned from politics for vote-buying and retreated to his power base in Buriram, bringing his passions — football and big bikes — with him.

He bought a small football club based near Bangkok, moved it to Buriram, and housed the squad in a gleaming stadium which towers above the ramshackle, one-storey homes common to the area.

Seven years on, Buriram United is one of the kingdom’s top teams — sponsored by a Who’s Who of Bangkok’s business elite — with five league titles and regular appearances in the Asian Champions league.

Newin, often seen cruising through town on his Ducati, also drew on wealthy Bangkok friends to erect the 1,400-acre racing circuit.

The track is named after its top sponsor Chang Beer, a booze giant owned by one the kingdom’s richest and most influential billionaires.

Newin says sport not politics has brought the boom to Buriram.

“I was a politician for over 20 years, but I couldn’t make people in this city richer or happier in the way I have in the past seven years of being a regular person,” he said.

“For those who live in other provinces — I hope that they will also have at least one person in their town is like me.”

Man of the people

Newin boasts of the speed in which his stadiums were built — a contrast to the delays that hobble government-backed infrastructure projects.

“No-one (in Buriram) is more influential than him,” said Chaiya Chotikavanik, a retired politics professor from Buriram Rajabhat University.

Even without an official post, “Newin has the type of power that means if he suggests how things should be, people listen,” Chotikavanik added.

This influence has been carefully burnished by his man-of-the-people image.

Renowned for eating at local pad thai joints, Newin readily lends his name — and cash — to all manner of community events.

Thousands of jobs have been created by the stadiums, with 5,000 new hotel rooms and hundreds of restaurants built in their wake.

But the biggest beneficiary of Buriram’s sporting ascent is likely to be the wily Newin himself.

Politics was like “living in hell,” he says with a grin, swatting away rumours of a return to the fray once Thailand emerges from junta control.

“Now that I’m out of it I feel like I’m in heaven. Now wherever I go people love me.”

CDC backs ‘reset’ of Election Commission

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/politics/30317504

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politics June 08, 2017 06:49

By The Nation

The Constitution Drafting Commission (CDC) has agreed to the idea of a “reset” of the Election Commission (EC) on the grounds that it would facilitate the EC’s work when the election draws near, said chief charter drafter Meechai Ruchupan on Wednesday.

Meechai said the CDC had attended a meeting of the committee vetting the law and eventually agreed with the idea to reset the EC.

Meechai said as the election scheduled for between late 2018 or early 2019 drew near, there would be more EC members who would vacate their posts following the expiration of their terms, which could pose a problem in selecting people to fill the vacancies.

The reset would follow the enactment of a new law as the best option and least complicated process, Meechai said.

He added that resets would not automatically be applied to other independent agencies, which should be considered on a case-by-case basis.

The EC was expected to see the greatest changes to its structure, he said.

“Reform is inevitable and may pose some impacts, so if we agree to take this path, it may hurt a bit,” said Meechai.

Maj-Gen link to arms suspect

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http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/politics/30317483

politics June 08, 2017 01:00

By THE NATION

‘Smuggled weapons may have been for political purposes’; house of democrat deputy leader Chaiwut searched.

A RETIRED ARMY major-general has been linked to a junior military officer arrested last Saturday on suspicion of smuggling a large quantity of weapons from Cambodia, a security source said yesterday.

An initial investigation indicated the possibility that the smuggled arms were being used for political purposes ahead of the next general election, according to the source who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The major-general was described by the source as having close ties with a politician who is against the post-coup government.

This high-ranking officer is also close to Flight Sergeant Pakhin Detphong, who drove the pickup truck that carried the weapons, according to the source. The vehicle was involved in a road accident in Trat province.

Meanwhile, Democrat Party deputy leader Chaiwut Bannawat’s house in the border province of Tak was searched yesterday by a joint force of some 50 police and military officers.

The surprise operation took place while an investigation is under way into the large number of weapons found in a pickup truck involved in a road accident in the eastern seaboard province of Trat on Saturday.

Pakhin, from the Internal Security Operations Command, who drove the vehicle, later confessed that he had smuggled the weapons from Cambodia for sale to Karen rebels in Myanmar.

A source familiar with the operation said yesterday that authorities were focusing on local influential figures as part of a “clean-up” attempt following the discovery of weapons in Trat and an explosive device in Tak recently. However, the source did not elaborate and it remained unclear if there was any connection between the two events. Nothing illegal was found during the search of Chaiwut’s house in Tak’s Mae Sot district, and no arrests were made. Chaiwut is a former member of Parliament for Tak and a former industry minister.

Reporters and passers-by were prohibited from taking photographs or recording videos of the search operation. Those who tried were stopped and told to delete the photos and videos from their cameras immediately.

Also in Tak yesterday, the house of provincial administrative organisation president Nattawut Thaweekuakulkit in Muang district was also searched by a separate group of some 80 officers. Four firearms and dozens of rounds of ammunition were found during the search.

An Immigration Police investigation found that Air Force officer Pakhin, 40, had no record of leaving the country via the Trat border checkpoint, Immigration Bureau chief Police Lt-General Natthorn Prosunthorn said yesterday. However, that was not the case with the two other suspects who were arrested with Pakhin. Cambodian Pisit Liang, 29, was found to have visited Thailand 231 times while Trat resident Jakkapong Krairiang, 37, had visited Cambodia 11 times, according to the immigration police chief.

A police investigation found that Pisit’s alleged weapons smuggling was not linked to a high-ranking official in Cambodia as some news reports had previously suggested.

Deputy Premier and Defence Minister General Prawit Wongsuwan yesterday said he had phoned his Cambodian counterpart, General Tea Banh about the matter. He said Tea Banh had called on the Thai media that linked him to the alleged smuggling ring to offer an official apology to the Cambodian government.

In a related development, officials from the Judge Advocate-General’s Department yesterday filed a police complaint against three military officers and 15 civilians allegedly involved in selling weapons online.

Many grenades were found in an unclaimed parcel at an outlet of private courier service Kerry Express in Bangkok’s Bang Khen district.

The suspects were all charged with possessing illegal firearms and explosive devices, he added. All the suspects were being detained at the 11th Military Circle command.

PM wants Thailand to become food industry ‘superpower’ in 20 years

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/politics/30317448

PM Prayut at Chanthaburi.

PM Prayut at Chanthaburi.

politics June 07, 2017 17:43

By The Nation

Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha vowed to make the country a food industry “superpower” in the next 20 years with a new strategy.

Prayut visited Chanthaburi on Wednesday to inspect the government’s initiatives, including reforms in agricultural cooperatives and fruit production, at the Fruitfital Fair 2017.

Chanthaburi is one of the country’s major fruit production areas. He said Thailand may not be able to become a military superpower but it’s possible for the country to become a superpower in the food industry in the next 20 years.

The premier said earlier during the trip that the government had been supporting farmers and fruit growers to stand on their own feet, by not just inflating farm product prices which is not sustainable in the long run.

They should be able to develop and produce their products with improved quality so that they can compete in the market in the long run, he said.

Probe into ministers’ qualifications a legal requirement, says Somchai

ศาสตร์เกษตรดินปุ๋ย : ขอบคุณแหล่งข้อมูล : หนังสือพิมพ์ The Nation

http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/politics/30317447

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politics June 07, 2017 17:40

By The Nation

Election Commissioner Somchai Srisutthiyakorn on Wednesday said the EC has launched a probe into the qualifications of nine ministers to follow the law, not to take revenge.

The EC is subject to “resetting” following the resolution made by the National Legislative Assembly’s law vetting committee. The EC draft bill is one of the 10 organic laws to be enacted following the new charter. The NLA is scheduled to deliberate it in the second and third readings on Friday.

The EC launched the probe following a resolution yesterday, Somchai said.

The move followed a complaint filed by Pheu Thai’s lawyer Ruangkrai Leekijwattana in early May. The EC has 60 days to consider the complaint to see whether it would submit the case to the Constitutional Court.

Somchai said he could not confirm whether the case would be completed within the present terms of the EC, but the current members have to launch the probe or they would face charges of negligence of duty.

Somchai said the EC’s legal team is looking into legal points of the “resetting” and would protest the NLA’s proposal.