Audio By Carbonatix
Thailand has dissolved parliament after nearly a week of fresh clashes along its border with Cambodia, with a general election to be called within 45 to 60 days.
In a royal decree published on Friday, Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul cited the deadly border dispute among other challenges his minority government has struggled to contain since it took office three months ago.
"The appropriate solution is to dissolve parliament… which is a way to return political power to the people," he said.
Anutin, a business tycoon, is Thailand's third prime minister since August 2023. When he took power in September, he said he would dissolve parliament by the end of January.
However, now facing an imminent vote of no confidence, Anutin brought the election forward.
Anutin and his Bhumjaithai party were heavily criticised for their handling of serious flooding in southern Thailand last month, which left at least 176 people dead.
The house's dissolution comes during renewed fighting with Cambodia, which has killed at least 20 people and displaced hundreds of thousands.
"The government had executed every means in public administration to quickly resolve the urgent issues overwhelming the country… but running the country requires stability," Anutin wrote in the decree endorsed by Thailand's King Maha Vajiralongkorn.
"As a minority government, together with troubling domestic political circumstances, it has been unable to carry out public administration continuously, effectively and with stability," he wrote.
The dissolution order comes after the prime minister lost the support of the youthful, progressive People's Party - also the largest party in parliament - which had previously backed his premiership.
The People's Party and the pragmatic, conservative Bhumjaithai are ideological opposites.
The opposition bloc's support, however, came with strings attached. It wanted Anutin to start reforms of Thailand's military-drafted constitution and to dissolve the house within four months, among other things.
The People's Party has now accused Bhumjaithai of failing to honour that deal. It had planned to submit a no-confidence motion against the government on Friday, according to Thai media - having already called on the prime minister on Thursday to disband parliament to "show responsibility towards the people".
"See you at the polling stations," the party said in statement on Facebook.
Thailand has been in political turmoil over the past year, with two prime ministers dismissed by the courts.
Anutin's predecessor Paetongtarn Shinawatra was removed for violating ethics, after she was heard calling Cambodia's former leader Hun Sen "uncle" and criticising the Thai army in a leaked phone call.
Srettha Thavisin, the leader before her, was also dismissed for violating ethics, by appointing to his cabinet a former lawyer who was once jailed.
Latest Stories
-
Family of Nana Konadu Agyeman-Rawlings dismisses circulating ‘will’ as false
2 minutes -
Accra ranks 8th most expensive city in Africa in 2026 as cost-of-living pressures persist
4 minutes -
KMA steps up inspection of food joints over sanitation concerns
6 minutes -
Ghanaian PhD scholars suspend UK protest after high-stakes diplomatic talks with High Commissioner
9 minutes -
Latif Iddrisu Case: Police witness struggles to substantiate claim of identification parade
17 minutes -
Water shortage hits parts of Kumasi following Owabi Plant shutdown
30 minutes -
NPP primaries: APL final survey tips Bawumia for clear victory
39 minutes -
Antoine Semenyo and the Ballon d’Or question
43 minutes -
US lawsuit claims WhatsApp can read private messages
49 minutes -
Multimedia Group vs. Kennedy Agyapong: Court adjourns defamation trial to February 11
58 minutes -
1,033 excavators now tracked as government tightens grip on illegal mining
1 hour -
First Sky to build 50 churches nationwide by year-end as solar project advances
1 hour -
Gov’t to roll out Land Banks Initiative to boost large-scale agriculture – Lands Minister
1 hour -
WHO backs Ghana’s health reforms, pledges support
1 hour -
Research in Accra shows 70% of couples struggling with childbirth due to male infertility — Dr Sefogah
2 hours
