Jump to content

Red-Shirt People Submit 65,000 Names To Sponsor Charter Amendment Bill


Recommended Posts

Posted

CHARTER AMENDMENT

Red-shirt people submit 65,000 names to sponsor bill

30174477-01_big.jpg

BANGKOK: -- A red-shirt group Wednesday submitted 65,400 names of voters to sponsor a bill seeking to amend the charter to permit rewriting of a new charter draft.

The bill and names of sponsors were submitted to Parliament President Somsak Kiartsuranon at 10.30am.

The bill was submitted by Yiamyod Srimunta, chairman of the Federation of Democracy Lovers.

Yiamyord said the bill would amend Article 291 of the 2007 charter so that voters could elect 375 members of a new constitution drafting assembly directly.

Yiamyord said the direct election of CDA members would allow the CDA members to be free from influence of Parliament and politicians.

Yiamyord said the 375 CDA members would be elected based on the current 375 constituencies nationwide.

The bill would require the 375 elected members to select 37 from their number to work on the constitution drafting panel. He said the bill would also require the drafting panel to have 12 other outsiders who will be legal experts, political scientists and former senior government officials.

Yimyord admitted that his group was part of the red-shirt movement.

Somsak said the list of sponsors has yet to be verified by parliament officials.

He said the current parliamentary session will expire in three months. He is not certain whether the verification process could be done in time to allow the bill to be placed on the agenda of Parliament or not.

nationlogo.jpg

-- The Nation 2012-01-25

Posted

Did they say what, precisely, they want to change on the constitution and for what reason?

Both in presenting the bundles and at the time of collecting the signatures.

Posted

Reds from Northeast push for CDA

The Nation

BANGKOK: -- A group of 30 red-shirt supporters from the Northeast, led by Yiamyod Srimanta, yesterday submitted some 65,000 signatures supporting a people's motion calling for charter changes via the Constitution Drafting Assembly (CDA).

This move is separate from an ongoing signature campaign organised by Pheu Thai MP Sanguan Pongmanee and other mainstream red shirts.

However, the two campaigns are similar in that they are both pushing for the formation of the CDA by amending Article 291 of the Constitution, which gives Parliament the sole mandate to rewrite the charter.

The gist of the people's motion is that the CDA should comprise 375 members elected by the people, Yiamyod said. The CDA members would then appoint a 49-member panel in charge of drafting charter amendments, he added. The panel should consist of 37 CDA members and 12 leading scholars on law, political science and public administration.

House Speaker Somsak Kiatsuranont said he would need two or three months to check and verify the signatures before including the people's motion as legislative agenda. Since the current House session ends in three months, Somsak said he was not sure if the motion could be deliberated upon before the House goes in recess.

He said he was obliged to abide by House procedures regardless of whether the parties concerned saw the issue as urgent or not.

Somsak added that in his opinion, the charter rewrite should not be rushed through before the House committee on reconciliation completes its report, which is expected to be ready in three months.

"The government has promised to amend the charter within a year of assuming office and there is still time," he said.

Coalition chief whip Udomdej Rattanasatien said the coalition alliance had no intention of amending the lese majeste law, and that it would confine itself to bringing about charter changes via the CDA.

Once the signature campaign led by Sanguan is completed, the charter rewriting process could kick off as early as next month, he said.

The House will likely debate and combine several key drafts on charter change such as those submitted by the Pheu Thai Party, the Chart Thai Pattana Party, the red-shirt movement and the people's motion before forming the CDA, he said.

In another development, Army chief General Prayuth Chan-ocha lashed out at the Nitirat academic group for circulating ideas that he deems inappropriate and offensive to the monarchy.

"Thai citizens across the country revere the monarchy, but you are trampling on people's feelings," he said in reference to the Nitirat group's proposals on charter amendments. Prayuth said he believes most academics are loyal to the monarchy but some in the 30-to-40 age group want to fix things even though they have no experience.

Nitirat academics are pushing for the lese majeste law to be amended and also want to revise charter provisions related to the monarchy. One of their proposals is that the Thai head of state should be sworn in to uphold the Constitution before assuming office.

nationlogo.jpg

-- The Nation 2012-01-26

Posted (edited)

Thanks for the 65.400 names.

It will only take 1 person to complain, and suddenly Thai police will HAVE to manatory investigate on 65.400 cases, because the current contitution includes some law that must not be admended.

Edited by sparebox2

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



×
×
  • Create New...