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Foreign community not concerned over national poll: EC chief


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Foreign community not concerned over national poll: EC chief

By Kas Chanwanpen 
The Nation

 

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Election Commission (EC) President Ittiporn Boonpracong

 

Election Commission (EC) President Ittiporn Boonpracong said on Friday that foreign diplomats and members of the international community have voiced no concerns about the upcoming national election.

 

Ittiporn spoke after briefing representatives from embassies and international agencies about the February 24 election at the Foreign Ministry. Attending the briefing were 90 diplomats from 71 countries and three international agencies. Of the 90 participants, 17 were ambassadors, an EC source said. 

 

After the meeting, Ittiporn said nobody expressed any concern. “They believe the election will be held as scheduled, even though the date has not been made official yet,” he said. 

 

However, he added, several diplomats raised questions about the election process, including the controversial plan to select the prime minister and whether the poll will have any international observers. Ittiporn said he told them that the election would be held in line with the Constitution, and that the EC welcomed foreign observers, provided they did not show up in large numbers as the agency may not have the capacity to host them all.

 

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/politics/30360427

 
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3 minutes ago, PatOngo said:

Is'nt it great that we, the foreign community have our own spokesman in the election commission to convey our thoughts.

Goes to show the Thaivisa isn't worth looking at or considered (by the power's that be), so why do some poster's think their input is meaningful in any way. 

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14 minutes ago, Artisi said:

Goes to show the Thaivisa isn't worth looking at or considered (by the power's that be), so why do some poster's think their input is meaningful in any way. 

You mean the govt doesn't form policy based on the comments posted on Thaivisa?......Well I'll be...….! 

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13 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

the EC welcomed foreign observers

But the Junta does not and guess who decides?

"Thailand does not need international observers to monitor next year’s general elections, the foreign minister said" https://www.reuters.com/article/us-thailand-politics/thai-junta-says-no-need-for-foreign-observers-at-next-years-election-idUSKCN1NB18S

“Allowing foreign observers means we have problems, in their eyes or in our own view. It means we can’t take care of ourselves. And that’s inauspicious,” Thailand’s Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai told reporters at Government House, adding that the best observers would be the Thai voters themselves.

https://www.thedailystar.net/online/news/thai-ban-foreign-polls-observer-un-unusual-step-1668499

 

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Whatever the outcome (if already known), it is interesting to know that the new parliament building at 1156/91 Samsen Road is near the military base of the 4th Tank Battalion of the 1st Division also on Samsen Road however this base is supposedly scheduled to move to Lop Buri or Saraburi in September 2019. (ref: Bangkok Post)

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I can think of at least 28 countries that are interested in the outcome of the election. They happen to be the member countries of the European Union. A free trade agreement might be riding on the outcome. Even more so the way that they see how election has been conducted. I suspect the EU can see right through the shenanigans that the junta has been up to in the lead up to this corrupted election and I doubt that will go down well in any decision making by Brussels. 

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I can think of at least 28 countries that are interested in the outcome of the election. They happen to be the member countries of the European Union. A free trade agreement might be riding on the outcome. Even more so the way that they see how election has been conducted. I suspect the EU can see right through the shenanigans that the junta has been up to in the lead up to this corrupted election and I doubt that will go down well in any decision making by Brussels. 
Think you should have put eu corruption in your sentence[emoji6][emoji23][emoji6]

Sent from my SM-G7102 using Thailand Forum - Thaivisa mobile app

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2 hours ago, Cadbury said:

I can think of at least 28 countries that are interested in the outcome of the election. They happen to be the member countries of the European Union. A free trade agreement might be riding on the outcome. Even more so the way that they see how election has been conducted. I suspect the EU can see right through the shenanigans that the junta has been up to in the lead up to this corrupted election and I doubt that will go down well in any decision making by Brussels. 

Indeed. As any negative outcome will surely be shady for the EU, which is for more dependent on this worked up agreement than Thailand might be....

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1 hour ago, Jimbo in Thailand said:

If so that might not be such a bad thing.  If Fearless Leader P and his minions took our comments seriously we'd probably all be rotting in a Thai jail right now... and/or already deported. :shock1:

They'd have to find us first.

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2 hours ago, Jimbo in Thailand said:

If so that might not be such a bad thing.  If Fearless Leader P and his minions took our comments seriously we'd probably all be rotting in a Thai jail right now... and/or already deported. :shock1:

Our comments pale greatly with those on Thai social media. Try reading them and you find them brutal, full of swear words and expletives filled attack of the junta aimed at both Ps. They have strength in numbers. 

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22 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

However, he added, several diplomats raised questions about the election process, including the controversial plan to select the prime minister and whether the poll will have any international observers.

Sort of like saying it is black, unless you would prefer it to be white, we will call it whatever you like! Does this misdirection and outright lying ever stop?

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