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Thailand plans July referendum on charter amendments
Wed, May 21, 2008
AFP

BANGKOK - THAILAND will hold a referendum in early July on whether to amend a military-backed constitution, which was approved by voters less than a year ago, Premier Samak Sundaravej announced on Wednesday.

Voters will not be asked to approve the amendments - only to decide whether the constitution should be changed, Mr Samak told reporters.

The referendum on changing the constitution would come less than 11 months after voters approved the current charter, which was drafted by a military-appointed panel following the 2006 coup against former premier Thaksin Shinawatra.

Mr Samak's drive to amend the charter has proved deeply divisive among Thailand's political elite, raising fears that the military could stage a new coup to prevent any constitutional changes.

'The referendum will be on whether to amend or not to amend. I will seek a two billion baht (S$85.7 billion) budget for the referendum, which will bring satisfaction to the Thai people and end the divisiveness in our country,' Mr Samak said.

'There will be 45 days for campaigning, so the referendum would take place in early July,' he said.

'If people are opposed to amending the constitution, then there is no need to amend it.'

Mr Samak had originally proposed amending only a few key clauses in the constitution, notably the articles allowing courts to dissolve political parties over election fraud.

But his People Power Party now says they would reinstate almost all of the 1997 constitution that was scrapped by the military following the coup against Thaksin.

That constitution was drafted after years of consultations with the Thai public.

The so-called 'People's Constitution' had been hailed as the most democratic basic law ever seen in the kingdom.

 

 
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