Chaiyasit Shinawatra
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Chaiyasit Shinawatra is a former commander-in-chief of the Royal Thai Army.[1] As a cousin of Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, his appointment was criticised as an act of nepotism.
General Chaiyasit was transferred from the Army to become a special advisor to the Supreme Command Headquarters under the administration of Prime Minister Chuan Leekpai.[2] In August 2001, General Chaiyasit was promoted to deputy commander of the Armed Forces Development Command.[3] In August 2002, he was promoted to the post of deputy commander-in-chief.
Both General Chaiyasit and the Defence Minister, General Chavalit Yongchaiyudh, denied accusations of nepotism. "If I'm appointed to a significant post in the Army because of my connection with the prime minister, I won't have any friends left in the armed forces," said Chaiyasit. Gen Chavalit said that Thaksin would not interfere with any high-level military reshuffles, and that "It's a shame that the prime minister's name was tainted by such a groundless rumour."[4]
General Chaiyasit replaced General Surayud Chulanont (who was promoted to become supreme commander of the Royal Thai Armed Forces) as commander-in-chief in August 2003.[5]
He was replaced as army chief in 2004, succeeded by Prawit Wongsuwan,[6][7] and was transferred to Supreme Command. Chaisit was then replaced as supreme commander in 2005, succeeded by Gen. Ruangroj Mararanont.[8]
[edit] References
- ^ Nation staff. August 25, 2006. "Former Army chief sues Sondhi", The Nation (retrieved September 20, 2006).
- ^ The Nation (Thailand), Thaksin cousin tipped for No 2 spot - 2002-08-21
- ^ The Nation (Thailand), Reshuffle seen as less political - 2001-08-09
- ^ The Nation (Thailand), Chaiyasit transfer "not PM's idea" - 2002-08-08
- ^ The Nation (Thailand), Chaiyasit, PM’s power base more solid than ever - 2003-08-31
- ^ Nation staff. August 25, 2004. "MILITARY RE-SHUFFLE: Chaisit out, Prawit ascends", The Nation {retrieved September 20, 2006.
- ^ Nation staff. August 25, 2004. "Prawit, a battle-hardened leader", The Nation (retrieved September 20, 2006).
- ^ Nation staff. September 8, 2005. "Long-delayed military reshuffle approved", The Nation (retrieved September 20, 2006).