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Prime-time propaganda? PM’s weekly programme shows junta is deeply embedded in Thai life

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A woman watching Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha during his weekly broadcast. Photo: Reuters
Reuters

On Friday evenings in Thailand, sandwiched between the news and a popular soap opera, is a prime-time programme that has been running ever since the military took over in a coup, three years ago today.

Called Sustainable Development from a Royal Philosophy it stars junta leader and former army chief General Prayuth Chan-ocha speaking on a range of topics, from the virtues of modesty to the state of the economy.

The military has always played a prominent role in Thai life. But Prayuth’s show is just one of many examples of how embedded the junta has become in Thai society. Thailand’s military government has acknowledged it wants to weaken political parties and maintain permanent influence over future elected governments, partly through a new constitution approved by Thailand’s king last month.

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A TV showing Prayuth’s programme in a shop in Bangkok. Photo: Reuters
A TV showing Prayuth’s programme in a shop in Bangkok. Photo: Reuters

But the military appears to be doing more that just that, by leaving an imprint on nearly every institution of Thai society.

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The military now controls 143 out of 250 parliamentary seats. Under the previous junta after the 2006 coup, the military held 67 out of 242 seats.

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