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Wednesday May 08, 2024

Thai progressives confident in royal insult policy case

By AFP
December 26, 2023

BANGKOK: Thailand´s progressive Move Forward Party, which won this year´s election but was shut out of government, said on Monday it was confident about a court case probing campaign pledges to reform royal insult laws.

MFP won most seats in the May poll, but then-leader Pita Limjaroenrat was blocked from becoming prime minister by conservative forces in the upper house of parliament. The party´s vow to reform Thailand´s tough lese-majeste laws spooked the largely royalist, pro-military senate, whose members were appointed by the last junta.

Former Thai prime ministerial candidate and ex-Move Forward Party leader Pita Limjaroenrat speaks to media as he leaves a hearing regarding his ownership of media shares at the Constitutional Court in Bangkok on December 20, 2023. — AFP
Former Thai prime ministerial candidate and ex-Move Forward Party leader Pita Limjaroenrat speaks to media as he leaves a hearing regarding his ownership of media shares at the Constitutional Court in Bangkok on December 20, 2023. — AFP

The Constitutional Court is considering a petition arguing that MFP´s pledge to reform lese-majeste laws amounted to an attempt to overthrow the constitutional monarchy. Former MFP leader Pita, who led the party in the election but has since stepped down, gave evidence at a hearing on Monday and said it “went well”.

“If you look at the scopes of the laws and accusations, the worst situation is that the Constitutional Court would ask us to stop the proceeding (of campaigning to amend the law),” Pita said, rejecting suggestions that the party is at risk of being dissolved.

The court said it would give its verdict in the case on January 31. Current party leader Chaithawat Tulathon said they were confident the policy was not in breach of the law.