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Mon, September 25, 2006 : Last updated 20:13 pm (Thai local time)



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Home > Opinion > CDRM could wear out its welcome





EDITORIAL
CDRM could wear out its welcome

Coup-makers have already taken several bad steps

If getting power is difficult, wielding it is even more so. This is the issue facing the Council for Democratic Reform under Constitutional Monarchy (CDRM), and at this point, nearly a week after it overthrew the Thaksin Shinawatra government, the CDRM is off to a disappointing start. First, the CDRM, under the leadership of Army chief General Sonthi Boonyaratglin, has failed to freeze the assets of politicians suspected of gaining their wealth through unusual means. One of the reasons the CDRM has used to justify its coup was the widespread corruption in the Thaksin government. Yet there have been no orders to freeze bank accounts or prevent politicians from transferring assets, even though the CDRM could take this step by relying on existing money-laundering laws.

Though Thaksin has taken refuge in London with one of his daughters, he still casts a dark shadow over the Kingdom. Khunying Pojaman and his two other children are in Bangkok. Their former associates, including people in the military, are also still around. We don't know what they are up to, but it would not be too much to assume they are negotiating a way of holding on to their assets.

From London, Thaksin has signalled to Sonthi that he would wash his hands of politics and wait for an interim government to be formed before returning home. It seems hard to believe that Thaksin would ever part with his power. He will likely plot a comeback if the CDRM lets him off the hook. The impression now is that the CDRM does not have a strategy to deal with Thaksin and his associates.

Second, nobody knows who is really in charge or whether the CDRM has a strategy to manage the transitional politics. People are wondering who has the final say in picking people to run the interim government, which will have to be formed over the next week or two.

The CDRM has made a big blunder by picking Meechai Ruchuphand, the veteran lawyer, as head of the legal team to draft the interim constitution. Meechai is not known for putting the public interest first. Why can't we have good people like Dr Amorn Chantrasomboon do this job instead?

Meechai has brought in Dr Wissanu Krea-ngam and Dr Borwornsak Uwanno to help him draft the interim constitution.

Both Wissanu and Borwornsak served in the position of secretary-general of the cabinet under Thaksin. Wissanu moved on to become a deputy prime minister, opening the way for Borwornsak. The two served the Thaksin regime faithfully. At the height of the leadership crisis, Borwornsak led a group of civil servants from Government House to give roses to Thaksin. But then he was among the first to jump ship when he realised that the Thaksin government was going down. He quickly entered the monkhood and started preaching good governance. Wissanu, who served the Thaksin regime almost to the end, followed Borwornsak by submitting his resignation as deputy prime minister. But everyone remembers how he spent three hours in front of a power-point display trying to convince the public that the CTX bomb scanners had been appropriately procured.

Suddenly, Wissanu and Borwornsak are back near the centre of power. Old political animals never die. Borwornsak played a key part in drafting the 1997 Constitution, which was toppled by the military coup last week. Now he is working on the interim constitution. He also would like to play a key role again drafting the next permanent constitution. Wissanu and Borwornsak have also succeeded in preventing Kaewsan Atibhodi, a former senator, from becoming a member of the newly appointed National Counter Corruption Commission (NCCC). Is the NCCC going to have real teeth in going after the ill-gotten assets? We have doubts.

Third, the CDRM appears to lack unity in its search for the new prime minister. This post is of the utmost importance because the interim prime minister will have to serve two years while the process of political reform is under way. We have overheard that Meechai is now one of the top candidates for the premiership. If this is the case, then the CDRM will quickly become a laughing stock.

The world is watching to see how Thailand will emerge from the military coup. The CDRM must pick the right people for the right jobs. If it can't, then its coup will be considered a fresh blast of power politics. The people are giving roses to the soldiers perched in their tanks in the capital. But if people of questionable integrity are allowed to have a role in running the interim government, then those same soldiers could find themselves pelted by rotten eggs.







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