Thai junta leader and army chief General
Prayuth Chan-ocha (left) receives the royally-endorsed interim constitution
from HM King Bhumibol Adulyadej Tuesday evening. (Pic: Khaosod
English/Facebook)
Two months after Thailand’s military has
staged a coup on May 22, 2014, the country has now adopted
a new interim constitution. Army chief and junta leader General Prayuth
Chan-Ocha was granted an audience with King Bhumibol Adulyadej on Tuesday in
order to seek His Majesty’s endorsement of the country’s 19th constitution.
The
2014 Interim Constitution, available online HERE on
the website of the Royal Gazette, is 17 pages long, consists of 48 articles and
draws up how and who will govern Thailand, who will draft and approve the next
full constitution, and what role the military junta aka the “National Council
for Peace and Order” (NCPO) will still have – all that with the proclaimed
aim of creating a “genuine
democracy” by “reforming” the country and “eradicating corruption” as
stated in the constitution’s preamble, before organizing new elections sometime
by October 2015.
Here’s
a first look and analysis of some of the key aspects of the new interim
constitution, grouped by field of topics. (Note: All citations are unofficial,
rough translations by this author.)
The
National Legislative Assembly (สภานิติบัญญัตแห่งชาต)
Article
6: The
National Legislative Assembly should have no more than 220 members,
who should be of Thai nationality since birth and no younger than 40 years of
age and appointed by the NCPO. The National
Legislative Assembly will assume the duties of the House of Representatives and
the Senate.
Article
7: Members
of the National Legislative Assembly should be knowledgeable and come
from different groups in society such as the state sector, the
private sector, the social sector, the academic sector, the professional sector
and other sectors that are beneficial to the National Legislative Assembly.
Article
8: A
member of the National Legislative Assembly is prohibited from assuming office
if he/she:
- Has assumed a
position in a political party within three years prior to the date of
appointment as member of the National Legislative Assembly.
- Is a Buddhist
novice or priest.
- Is bankrupt or
has caused bankruptcy through corruption.
- Has been
previously stripped of his/her right to vote.
- Has been
previously expelled, dismissed or fired as a government official or
employee at a state enterprise on the grounds of corruption, fraud or
misconduct.
- Has had assets
seized by the court.
- Has been
previously barred or removed from political office.(…)
The
National Legislative Assembly (NLA) will be housing both chambers of the House
filled with appointees of the junta, who are not politicians or have been that
for the past three years (perhaps coincidentally, three years since the
election victory of the government the junta has just ousted), but instead with
representatives from different sectors of society. Sounds familiar…
The
Prime Minister and the cabinet (นายกรัฐมนตรและคณะรัฐมนตรี)
Article
19: HM
The King endorses the Prime Minister and other ministers, not exceeding 35
[cabinet members], who are appointed by the National Legislative
Assembly (…)
The
requirements of a prime minister or cabinet member stay mostly the same (Article
20) compared to the previous constitution: still must be born Thai, now has
to be no younger than 40 years (previously 35), still has to be university
education with at least a Bacherlor’s degree. However, like the members of the
NLA, the prime minister and the other ministers must not have assumed a
position in a political party within the last three years.
Also,
he/she cannot be at the same time be a member of the NLA, the National Reform
Council, the Constitutional Drafting Committee, the member of a local
government or of the independent government agencies (e.g. Election Commission,
National Anti-Corruption Commission, National Human Rights Commission etc.).
That would already exclude a lot of potential candidates and make
way for plenty others.
The
cabinet may be allowed to attend and speak at the NLA, but they are not allowed
to cast their vote at the sessions (Article 19).
The National
Reform Council (สภาปฏิรูปแห่งชาติ)
Article
27: A
National Reform Council should study and propose reforms to the following
areas:
(1)
Politics, (2) Public administration, (3) Law and Justice, (4) Local government,
(5) Education, (6) Economy, (7) Energy resources, (8) Public health &
environment, (9) Mass Media, (10) Social, (11) others
This
will allow a democratic regime with the King as the Head of State that is in
accordance with a Thai society in which elections are honest and fair, with
mechanisms to prevent and eradicate corruption and misconduct, to eliminate
disparity and create social and economic fairness, in order to have sustainable
development.
Article
28: The
National Reform Council should have not more than 250 members.
(…)
As with
members of the NLA, the members of the National Reform Council (NRC) are
appointed by the junta and are subject to the same restrictions as stated in
Article 8. The composition of the NRC is a little bit more complex:
Article
30: The
NCPO will appoint members of the National Reform Council based on the following
rules:
- Establish a
selection committee which will appoint members for the committees of each
area as stated in Article 27 and also a selection committee in every
province (…)
- The NCPO will
appoint the selection committees from a line of experts (…)
- The selection
committee is tasked to find qualified persons based on Article 28 and
Article 29 (…). A list with names will be submitted to the NCPO for
approval. Members of the selection committee cannot put their own names on
the list
- The selection as
stated in (3) should consider a diverse range of candidates from
various sectors such as from the state, private, social, academia,
professional and other sectors that are beneficial to the work of the
National Reform Council, including from all provinces (…) all
genders and those less privileged.
Going
by that text, the makeup of the the NRC would be 77 members – one from each
province – and 173 others, who are able to send draft bills to the National
Legislative Assembly for consideration (Article 31.3). Also, how
inclusive will be the council really be? For example, will “all genders” be
represented, including transgender people?
The
Constitutional Drafting Committee (คณะกรรมาธิการยกร่างรัฐธรรมนูญ)
Article
32: A Constitutional
Drafting Committee should prepare a draft constitution, which consists of 36
members (…)
- The chairman
will be appointed by the NCPO
- The National
Reform Council will appoint 20 members
- The National
Legislative Assembly, the Cabinet and the NCPO will appoint 5 members each
As the
name implies, the Constitutional Drafting Committee (CDC) is tasked to draft a
new full constitution in 120 days after its inception through the National
Reform Council (NRC) (Article 34) and will include a broad catalogue of
considerations (Article 35, which we may cover in a future post) such as
mechanisms to “eradicate corruption”.
However,
should the CDC fail to present a finished draft at the end of the 120 days, the
committee will be sacked and a new one will be set up (Article 38). Even
more severe, should the draft be rejected by the National Reform Council or
should the consideration take longer than 15 days (as stated in Article
37), BOTH the Constitutional Drafting Committee and the National
Reform Council will be dissolved and replaced by a new one, and the whole
process starts anew (also Article 38). All sacked members would be
barred from joining the newly formed CDC and NRC. There could be a potentially
interesting precedent here.
Also, as
expected, there’s no word on a public referendum on the new constitution.
The National
Council for Peace and Order (คณะรักษาความสงบแห่งชาติ)
It
comes at no surprise that the NCPO, aka the junta, will maintain some
considerable influence for the foreseeable future. It affirms that the junta is
in charge in the absence of a government and parliament (Article 43) and
all past 100+ orders and announcements are still valid (Article 47).
And Article 44 underlines that the junta will stay in power:
Article
44: For
the benefit of the reform process to promote unity and solidarity of the people
or in order to prevent or protect from threats against public order, national
security, the monarchy, national economy or sovereignty of the country – no
matter whether it’s from inside or outside the country – the head of
the NCPO is authorized, with the approval of the NCPO board, to order, to
suspend or to take action, regardless of its effects on the
legislative, executive or judiciary. All orders or acts are to be
regarded as lawful and constitutional. At the conclusion of that
order or act, the speaker of the National Legislative Assembly and the Prime
Minister are to be notified as soon as possible.
What
may appear as an emergency passage for some, this is basically a carte
blanche authorizing the junta to do nearly everything it sees fit,
from calling special meetings to seemingly unlimited vetoing powers. No matter
if it violates this constitution or law, this article could enable
extrajudicial actions against those it sees as a threat.
And
finally, the very last article of the interim constitution states:
Article
48: All
acts related to the seizure of power on May 22, 2014 by the NCPO and those
associated or ordered by the head [of NCPO] (…) regardless of its impact on the
legislature, executive and judiciary (…) and regardless of the acts carried out
on, before or after said day, should those acts are considered to be unlawful, all
those associated with those acts are entirely free of fault or guilt.
As with
previous coups, the junta has written its own amnesty into law.
Summary
aka the “tl;dr”-part
- A fully
junta-appointed, 220-strong National Legislative Assembly that
doubles as both the parliament and the senate, which will deliberate and
vote on bills.
- A 250-strong National
Reform Council supposedly representing a broad section of society
and all provinces looking to reform almost every aspect in the country and
also able to draft bills.
- All persons
holding a position at a political party within the past three
years are barred from participating.
- A 36-strong Constitutional
Drafting Committee tasked with, well, drafting a new constitution
with 120 days or else faced with dissolution, only to be replaced by a new
committee. No word of a public referendum.
- The NCPO aka the
junta will still wield considerable powers whenever it sees fit
and also has given itself an amnesty for the May 22 coup.
- According to
media reports, all appointments should be done by September later
this year and more
official details are expected Wednesday morning at a press conference by
the NCPO.
Saksith
Saiyasombut
About
the author:
Saksith Saiyasombut blogs about Thai politics and current affairs since 2010 and works as freelance foreign TV correspondent. Read his full bio onabout.me/saksith.
Saksith Saiyasombut blogs about Thai politics and current affairs since 2010 and works as freelance foreign TV correspondent. Read his full bio onabout.me/saksith.
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