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Tue, November 7, 2006 : Last updated 22:16 pm (Thai local time)



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Home > Headlines > People's right to know suffered under Thaksin : PM





People's right to know suffered under Thaksin : PM

Prime Minister Surayud Chulanont said Tuesday the "people's right to know" had suffered under the previous administration of Thaksin Shinawatra because of his government's "carrot and stick" approach to media management.

"Report positively and you will be rewarded, report negatively and suffer the consequences," said Surayud, in his prepared speech at a dinner hosted by the Foreign Correspondent Club of Thailand.

Surayud said Thai people have over the past five years "suffered from a deformed media environment. Broadcast media were muzzled, news coverage was statedirected. I believe that is called propaganda."

Regarding the September 19 coup, Surayud said the Council for National Security (CNS) will be issuing a White Paper to explain why they had to oust the Thaksin regime.

While falling short of justifying the CNS's action, Surayud said he would not have accepted the premiership if he wasn't absolutely sure that the motives for the "military intervention in the governance of this country were entirely honourable and in the public interest, and that their actions were taken only with the greatest reluctance.

"Firstly, what Thailand has experienced over the last five years may have had the form of democracy, but certainly not the content," Surayud said.

"It was the camouflage of electoral politics subverting the true democratic principles of the rule of law, justice for all, honesty and transparency in government, and respect for human rights.  This subversion of democratic principles was not the mandate given to the government by the people; rather, it was a mandate unilaterally shaped by a political party that pulled together unprecedented political and financial power, power so great that all the checks and balances so carefully built into the 1997 Constitution were neutralised," he said.

Besides the need for a freer media and the rational behind the coup, Surayud said a a successful political reform remained the government's top priority.

"By successful political reform I mean that in one year's time we will have a new Constitution, ratified by the people in a national referendum, which will form the basis for a more just, more egalitarian and more democratic society," he said.

He said the government intends to stimulate a broad, inclusive national debate focusing on the "choices about what sort of society we wish to live in and what sort of society we wish our children to inherit."

 He said the government plans to form a Political Development Council to stimulate this national debate and accelerate the pace of political reform.

"Let me emphasise at this time that I am not talking about governmentdirected political reform.  This Interim Government does not have the moral authority to impose its ideas concerning political reform on our citizens.  It will be their choices, hopefully made from a more informed view point," he said.

The second major challenge, said Surayud, is the reduction in social and political tension within all sectors of the society.

He pointed to the three Malay speaking southernmost provinces where "violent death has become a daily tragedy."

Surayud said his "unreserved apology" to the residents of the deep South reflects his notion that "every citizen of Thailand must share the burden of this situation."

 Besides the dropping of all charges against the 92 Tak Bai protestors and the reinstatement of the Southern Border Provinces Administrative Centre to help with national reconciliation, the government plans to utilise the recommendations from the National Reconciliation Commission as the basic guidelines for the government's policy towards the restive region.

 On the issue of inequality, in spite of 40 years of rapid economic development, Thailand today still has far too many poor people who have not benefited from this economic development to the extent that they should have.

"This great divide between the rich and the poor is also a divide in terms of opportunity. In a fair, just and democratic society each citizen should have equal opportunities for education, health, a productive working life and a graceful retirement. This is not the situation today."

 Surayud said the government plans to undertake far reaching and drastic reforms in the administration of justice, in the police and in the permanent strengthening of anticorruption agencies. 

"I understand that between such good intentions and their effective implementation many politicians' promises have been lost. But I am not a politician and I am not bound by special interests. Moreover, I have the authority and the power that comes with being an appointed Prime Minister to act quickly and decisively," Surayud said.

 He said Thailand will continue to be an open market economy and that his notion of growth embraces not only competitiveness but also sustainable development, social justice and contentment.

The Nation








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