Minister and his deputy will not resign over community council bill

Social Development and Human Security Minister Paiboon Wattanasiritham and his deputy Poldej Pinpratheep backed away Monday from their threat to resign if the Community Organisation Council Bill was not passed.
"Even if the bill is not yet possible, there are other measures that can be used," Paiboon said. He suggested ministerial regulations and efforts to strengthen communities could also achieve what the bill was hoping to do. In an aboutface, Paiboon no longer demanded the bill be urgently legislated. "Good bills with significant changes take time. It took six years for the National Health Bill to become law," he said. The Council of State was currently reviewing the Community Organisation Council Bill. Poldej said his ministry would not try to push further for the legislation of the bill because it had already done its best. He explained that if the bill caused conflict, it reflected that relevant parties were not yet ready. "So, every party should be given time to study the issue further," he added. Asked about his and Paiboon's resignation threats, Poldej said it was intended to show how serious they were about the bill. "Resignation would not be good for the country and the government. In my position I need to help, as the government has to deal with unrest in the South and political conflicts," he said. The Community Organisation Council Bill has won support from many organisations, yet it has raised concerns about redundancy and possible conflicts between communityorganisation councils and local administrative organisations. Gothom Arya, chairman of the National Economic and Social Advisory Council, suggested communityorganisation councils should exist only in areas that were ready. "There's no point in forcing an area that is not yet ready to come on board," he said. The Nation
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