Connect with us

Thailand Politics

Thai PM Defends Martial Law to Students at National Defense College

Avatar of CTN News

Published

on

Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha, chief of the National Council for Peace and Order at the National Defense College

Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha, chief of the National Council for Peace and Order at the National Defense College

 

 

BANGKOK – Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha, chief of the National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO), said a special law is necessary to ensure national progress and that different opinions were blocking national reform for the time being.

In his lecture to students at the National Defense College this morning, Gen Prayut said “I am not enjoying exercising a great deal of power but a special law is necessary.”

He apparently was responding to calls to end the imposition of martial law that the military applied days before the NCPO seized power on May 22.

In the session he was asked if and how much his national reform move will succeed and what obstructs it. Gen Prayut replied that different opinions were the obstacle and that sovereignty was the only solution.

“Six months before the power seizure, budgets could not be spent and everything was stalled. I am a democratic soldier but I cannot tolerate the failure of the country,” Gen Prayut said.

He said he understood and tolerated those who had different opinions, and promised that he would not intervene in the drafting of the new constitution and national reform brainstorming.

Reform guidelines will conclude in a year for the next government to implement, but he warned that mistrust posed problems to reform efforts.

Gen Prayut said that conflicts in Thailand resulted from inequality and poverty and the government was solving them to prevent anyone from using people to create disunity.

When questioned about his recent trip to Khon Kaen, Prime Minister Gen Prayut Chan-o-cha said that he did not feel disheartened by the protest by students he encountered Wednesday during his trip to the Northeast, which is a stronghold of anti-coup movements.

Five students from Khon Kaen University wore black shirts with an anti-coup message showing a three-finger salute, a symbolic gesture showing opposition to the May 22 coup, to Gen Prayut as he was about to speak at Khon Kaen Provincial Hall to launch the campaign to assist drought victims in the region.
Speaking to reporters on the matter, Gen Prayut pointed out that disagreement could happen anytime and anywhere and said he can tolerate it as long as people expressed their disagreements and differences peacefully.
He said he does not view this as obstacle to his job and said he would try to [improve] understanding and adjust the attitude of these people.
Following their interruption, the five students were escorted out of the hall by police. Police Officials said they were reportedly taken for attitude adjustment.
Bangkok students participate in a short-lived picnic at Democracy Monument Wednesday night organised in support of detained student activists in the Northeast. Police quickly shut down the activity, deeming it an anti-coup protest.

Bangkok students participate in a short-lived picnic at Democracy Monument

 

Meanwhile, the Bangkok Post reported that Eleven student activists were briefly detained Wednesday night after having a picnic at Democracy Monument in Bangkok in support of five Khon Kaen students detained earlier in the day for their anti-coup protest in Khon Kaen.

Police rushed to the scene and took the Bangkok students to Samran Rat police station to undergo ”attitude adjustment” before releasing them without charge.

The activists said their activity was held to give their morale support to the five Northeast student who not only made the Hunger Games gesture at Khon Kaen provincial hall Wednesday morning, but also appeared at Gen Prayut’s speech on drought problems wearing t-shirts emblazoned with an anti-coup message.

Continue Reading

CTN News App

CTN News App

Recent News

BUY FC 24 COINS

compras monedas fc 24

Volunteering at Soi Dog

Find a Job

Jooble jobs

Free ibomma Movies