Home

Web Blog

Shopping

NationEjobs

Web Directory

Back Issue








Thu, April 27, 2006 : Last updated 20:32 pm (Thai local time)



Lite version


Printable version


E-mail this article


Bookmark



Web


The Nation





Home > Politics > EC urged to step down over poll 'failure'





EC urged to step down over poll 'failure'


A Ramkhamhaeng University student covers his head with a can to protest against Thai Rak Thai MPs who received fewer votes than the ‘no votes’ cast in their constituencies. The student said the MPs-elect should be too ashamed to take seats in Parliament.
The Election Commission (EC) yesterday came under pressure to quit if the consortium of courts decides to nullify the April 2 election following His Majesty the King's historic speech on Tuesday night.

Assist Prof Tossapol Sompong, a lecturer at Sakhon Nakhon Rajabhat University, said the EC should set an example as an independent agency and take responsibility for its mismanagement by stepping down and not waiting to be ousted by the public.

"The election commissioners should not simply perform their roles without exercising their conscience,'' he said.

Nirand Kultanant, an academic at Buri Ram Rajabhat University, agreed that the commissioners should listen to their consciences after inappropriately organising an election with no independent agencies to check whether it was clean and fair.

"There have been attempts to prevent scrutiny, causing the election to be distorted. They should be sensitive about this and not wait for someone to pressure them to resign. The only agency that can impeach them is the Senate, but it has done nothing,'' he said.

 Assoc Prof Somkiat Tangnamo, rector of The Midnight University, said most academics believed the April 2 election was unfair, and that the EC must take responsibility. "There have been calls for them to quit but they have not responded,'' he said.

Charoon Yoothong, an academic from the Institute for Southern Thai Studies, said the commissioners should show their democratic spirit by resigning because they failed to organise the election according to democratic principles. "The most serious [problem] is that they are under the influence of the Thaksin government,'' he said.

Assist Prof Thawee Surarithikul, a lecturer at Sukhothai Open University's Political Science Faculty, said the EC must take responsibility for organising the election in haste and causing confusion and turmoil.

"Part of the King's speech to the Administrative Court said that if you cannot do it, then quit. I believe that the EC is another agency that failed - so it must take responsibility,'' he said.








Most Popular Politics Stories


Cabinet to issue decree to convene House

Overseas glamour eases PM's domestic woes

'Not averse to dissolution'

PM's trip personal: Kantathi

Few confident outcome will be successful


Home
I
Web Blog
I
Shopping
I
NationEjobs
I
Job Search
I
Web Directory
I
Back Issue


E-mail Us

I


Feed Back

I


Terms & Conditions

I


Advertisments

Privacy Policy © 2006 www.nationmultimedia.com
44 Moo 10 Bang Na-Trat KM 4.5, Bang Na district, Bangkok 10260 Thailand
Tel 66-2-325-5555, 66-2-317-0420 and 66-2-316-5900 Fax 66-2-751-4446
Contact us: Nation Internet
File attachment not accepted!