World

Thai PM, ministers survive no-confidence vote

More anti-government protests planned

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 04 Sep 2021 2:30PM

Thai PM, ministers survive no-confidence vote
Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-O-Cha says he remains confident after surviving the vote in Parliament today. – AFP pic, September 4, 2021

BANGKOK – Thailand’s Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-O-Cha and five cabinet members comfortably survived a vote of no confidence in Parliament today as activists planned more protests against the government.

Prayuth received 264 votes in favour and 208 against. Health Minister Anutin Charnvirakul and four other ministers also survived the censure motion in similar fashion.

The opposition needed 242 of the 482 parliamentary votes to oust the prime minister.

Prayuth said he remained confident after the vote.

Lawmakers had over four days accused his government of mishandling the pandemic and criticised him for the severe economic impact, taking aim at the government’s slow vaccine roll-out as a result of not making advance vaccine orders and deciding not to join the international Covax vaccine-supply scheme.

Prayuth has stood by those decisions.

This is the third censure motion the government has survived and comes as pro-democracy protesters plan more demonstrations today.

Recent rallies have turned violent, with security forces using tear gas, water cannon and rubber bullets against protesters who threw stones and firecrackers.

Thailand has reported more than 1.2 million infections and over 12,000 coronavirus-related deaths, most of them since April due to the Delta variant.

Authorities reported the largest single-day increase in cases in mid-August with more than 23,000 cases.

The vaccine roll-out began in June amid the country’s most severe outbreak, with people unable to find medical treatment and some dying at home. About 13% of Thailand’s more than 66 million have been fully vaccinated.

The government cut its 2021 economic growth forecast for a third time, to 0.7%-1.2% from 1.5%-2.5%. The economy shrank 6.1% last year. – Reuters, September 4, 2021

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