Court orders dissolution of anti-military Thai party

Published February 22, 2020
The ruling could edge the politically febrile kingdom closer to street protests. — AFP/File
The ruling could edge the politically febrile kingdom closer to street protests. — AFP/File

BANGKOK: A stridently anti-military Thai party was dissolved on Friday and its key members banned from politics for a decade over a $6 million loan by its billionaire founder, a withering blow to the kingdom’s pro-democracy movement.

The ruling could edge the politically febrile kingdom — whose economy is shrinking — closer to the street protests that have scored much of the last 15 years of Thai history.

The Future Forward Party (FFP), fronted by the charismatic auto-parts scion Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit, emerged from nowhere in March last year to become Thailand’s third biggest party in the first elections since a 2014 coup.

The party’s radical agenda — calling for full democracy, an end to conscription and the removal of the army from politics and business — won it 6.3 million votes and pitched it against the powerful, conservative military.

But since their strong poll showing, Thanathorn and his 76 lawmakers have faced relentless rounds of legal cases in Thailand’s courts.

On Friday the nine-member constitutional court dissolved FFP, ruling a $6 million loan by Thanathorn breached the law governing political parties.

The loan exceeded the $315,000 limit on donations to parties by an individual, one judge said.

Sixteen party executives, including founder Thanathorn, were also “banned for running for political office for 10 years,” judge Nakarin Mektriarat added.

Future Forward has denied wrongdoing.

A defiant Thanathorn, who has 29 court cases lodged against him and his party, told supporters “don’t give up, don’t stop the dream.” “In the darkest day for Thai society, I can say that I did not sit still waiting for it to explode,” he added, of establishing the now-disbanded party.

The same court has taken out several pro-democracy parties since 2008 and knocked two anti-establishment prime ministers from power.

Late Friday around 500 Future Forward supporters — many young — gathered at its downtown Bangkok headquarters to cheer defiant speeches and political rap songs.

“Today is not a last page of the book,” Thanathorn, who has vowed to build a progressive movement outside of parliament, told the crowd.

“Today is the last page of chapter one. Tomorrow we will start the second chapter.”

The ruling puts a pin in the immediate political aspirations of Thanathorn, whose emergence on the Thai political stage has inspired millennials but frightened the country’s conservative establishment.

“I don’t understand why they do this. Do they want people to come out on to the street?” a desolate FFP supporter at the party headquarters said.

Thailand has seen several rounds of bloody competing street protests roughly between those who support democracy and those who buttress the royalist army establishment, which draws on the backing and wealth of the kingdom’s oligarchs.

Published in Dawn, February 22nd, 2020

Opinion

Editorial

Impending slaughter
Updated 07 May, 2024

Impending slaughter

Seven months into the slaughter, there are no signs of hope.
Wheat investigation
07 May, 2024

Wheat investigation

THE Shehbaz Sharif government is in a sort of Catch-22 situation regarding the alleged wheat import scandal. It is...
Naila’s feat
07 May, 2024

Naila’s feat

IN an inspirational message from the base camp of Nepal’s Mount Makalu, Pakistani mountaineer Naila Kiani stressed...
Plugging the gap
06 May, 2024

Plugging the gap

IN Pakistan, bias begins at birth for the girl child as discriminatory norms, orthodox attitudes and poverty impede...
Terrains of dread
Updated 06 May, 2024

Terrains of dread

Restored faith in the police is unachievable without political commitment and interprovincial support.
Appointment rules
Updated 06 May, 2024

Appointment rules

If the judiciary had the power to self-regulate, it ought to have exercised it instead of involving the legislature.