Junta gravely hurt Thailand, say experts
Bangkok: Thailand would have performed much better if the National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO) had not seized power in 2014 and taken firm control over the country during the past three years, academics said yesterday.
Some politicians, meanwhile, took turns criticising the NCPO’s performance, including former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra.
Marking the third anniversary of the coup, the Thai Academic Network for Civil Rights held a press briefing to elaborate on the opportunities they felt Thailand had lost since the military took power.
Bandit Chanrotchanakit, a political science lecturer from Chulalokongkorn University, said freedom of expression had significantly decreased under the junta’s rule.
The order banning political gatherings of five or more people, for instance, has put pressure on attempts at public scrutiny of the NCPO’s performance, he said.
From activists’ attempts to visit Rajabhakti Park to observe any irregularities, to movements [critical to the then-charter draft] on the referendum, they [participants] were all suspended by the NCPO, Bandit said.
Even reporters and lawyers on these cases were prosecuted for breaking the junta order, he said.
A climate of fear has even been cast over private conversations online, especially on subjects related to lese majeste, the lecturer said.
The NCPO, during one period, also equipped a military court to prosecute civilians on claims of so-called national security and sedition, while the swift use of power under Article 44 in the now-defunct interim constitution is still authorised in enforcing the charter, also suppressing people’s different opin- ions in many cases, he argued.
Such scenes have resulted in a lost opportunity for the country to develop a democratic society, which also makes the NCPO’s claim of building reconciliation and unity nearly impossible, he added.
Decharat Sukkamnard, an economics lecturer at Kasetsart University, said the NCPO, through its Article 44 orders, had deprived the public of participation in the deliberation of resource-management issues that could have an effect on local communities.
The NCPO head Prime Minister General Prayut Chan-ocha has also on many occasions appeared to speak against human values, especially those of lower-income people, Decharat claimed.