Former Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra

Former Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra on Thursday criticized a military-backed draft constitution as a “folly” that would perpetuate the power of the ruling junta and make it impossible for future elected governments to rule.
The country will decide in a referendum on Sunday whether to accept the constitution in the biggest test of public opinion since the generals seized power in 2014. A vote in favor of the charter could give the military a permanent role in overseeing economic development and politics.
As about 3,000 students, civil servants and military cadets gathered in Bangkok to urge people to vote, Thaksin said in a statement e-mailed to Reuters the charter was a “nightmare of contradiction and confusion.”
“The drafters ... created a constitution for the ‘continuity’ of the absolute power of the present coup makers to continue even after the new constitution is proclaimed,” he said in response to a question about his opinion on the referendum.
The ruling military council has said the charter will pave the way for a general election in 2017, ensure clean politics and end more than a decade of political turmoil since Thaksin, his allies and their rural supporters challenged the royalist and military establishment.
Thaksin, a former telecommunications tycoon who won the loyalty of legions of poor voters with populist policies, was toppled in a 2006 coup. He lives in self-exile to avoid a graft conviction he says was politically motivated.
Thailand’s two biggest political parties, one of which is loyal to Thaksin, oppose the constitution because they say provisions are designed to ensure military supervision of politics.
The constitution would put so much power in the hands of bodies tasked with acting as counter-balances to governments that it would make Thailand ungovernable, Thaksin said.
“I predict that, even if the new government receives perfect endorsement from the present regime, it will find it impossible to manage the Thai economy or administer the country under those proposed conditions,” he said.
The junta, known as the National Council for Peace and Order, has said it wants to return Thailand to democracy but to ensure politicians put the people’s interests first.

Source ; Arab News