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Thai coup leaders choose interim
premier
Bagkok -
Thailand's coup leaders strengthened their grip on power Friday by
sidelining key military supporters of the ousted prime minister, and
one official said a former army commander and close adviser to the
king had been picked as interim premier.
Thailand's auditor general, Jaruvan
Maintaka, told reporters late Thursday that Gen. Surayud Chulanont,
62, a highly regarded retired officer, would lead the country until
promised elections next year.
"Yes, definitely, Gen. Surayud is the
prime minister. He is the suitable person," Jaruvan said. Her comments
were posted on the government Public Relations Department's official
Web site Friday.
But the government had not made its
official announcement yet, and when telephoned Friday Jaruvan denied
her comments, telling The Associated Press: "I didn't say so."
The new ruling military council has
hinted that its choice is Surayud, and Friday morning Bangkok
newspapers carried headlines that he would probably head the new
government. His appointment was expected to be announced this weekend
or Monday, after it receives approval from King Bhumibol Adulyadej.
The coup leaders, meanwhile,
tightened their hold by moving from key positions military officers
who had been key supporters of now-deposed Prime Minister Thaksin
Shinawatra.
In an annual reshuffle of top-ranking
officers announced Friday, a number of officers loyal to Thaksin were
removed from commands and transferred to either inactive positions or
attached to agencies that take them outside the chain of command.
An announcement in official media
said the king endorsed the changes.
Two members of the ruling council —
Gen. Winai Phattiyakul and Gen. Boonsang Niempradit — were given more
powerful positions while five other army generals who had stood up to
Thaksin likewise received promotions.
Winai
is to become permanent secretary of the Defense Ministry, a key slot,
while Boonsang was promoted from deputy supreme commander of the armed
forces to supreme commander.
Patchara
Kampitak, president of the Reporters Association of Thailand, told The
Associated Press that reporters from several Thai media outlets
visited coup leader Gen. Sondhi Boonyaratkalin on Friday and received
assurances "about freedom of the media."
Kampitak
quoted Sondhi as saying the interim premier would not be a "surprise
to the media."
"His face is familiar to you
(reporters) and he is the man to `wai' (greet with respect) without
any qualms," Kampitak quoted Sondhi as saying.
Akara
Thiprot, a spokesman for the council, said an interim constitution has
been completed and sent to the Royal Palace. He hoped the constitution
could be announced Saturday or Sunday, followed by the formal
announcement of the prime minister over the weekend or Monday.
The expected appointment of Surayad
was likely to be widely praised in Thailand.
Over a 40-year career in the
military, Surayud garnered a reputation for effectiveness, tact and
incorruptibility. Upon his retirement in 2003, he was appointed to the
Privy Council, the top advisory body to the king.
During his career he fought Thai
communist insurgents and handled the sensitive situation along the
embattled Cambodian border during the 1980s. He was regarded as close
to the American military, which praised him throughout his career.
A devout Buddhist, Surayud spent time
as a monk after leaving the army and often said he had no intention of
entering the political fray.
Korn
Chatikavanij, deputy general secretary of the Democrat Party, which
opposed Thaksin, said earlier that Surayud is an "appropriate" choice.
Although being a former general might
give the outside world the impression the military was merely
transferring power to one of its cronies, that would be neither true
nor relevant, he said.
"What is important is domestic
reconciliation and Gen. Surayud is ideal for that," Korn told The
Associated Press.
The coup leaders accused Thaksin of
corruption and seized power in a bloodless takeover Sept. 19 while the
premier was abroad, vowing to name a civilian prime minister within
two weeks.
Thaksin
is now in London and he has not indicated if or when he may try to
return to Thailand.
Large demonstrations early this year
demanding his ouster reflected a polarized Thai society, and many
Thais have greeted the coup as a resolution of a national crisis.
The United States, which has decried
the coup as a setback to democracy, on Thursday suspended $24 million
in assistance to Thailand. -- The
Associated Press
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