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Chatichai Choonhavan

Prime Minister of Thailand from 1988 to 1991

Chatichai Choonhavan

Prime Minister of Thailand from 1988 to 1991

FieldValue
honorific-prefixGeneral
nameChatichai Choonhavan
native_nameชาติชาย ชุณหะวัณ
nationalityThai
imageChatichai Choonhavan.jpg
captionChatichai in 1989
order17th Prime Minister of Thailand
monarchBhumibol Adulyadej
party
term_start4 August 1988
term_end23 February 1991
predecessorPrem Tinsulanonda
successorSunthorn Kongsompong (as Head of the National Peacekeeping Council)
Anand Panyarachun
order1Deputy Prime Minister of Thailand
primeminister1Prem Tinsulanonda
term_start15 August 1986
term_end13 August 1988
office2Minister of Industry
term_start25 October 1976
term_end26 October 1976
primeminister2Seni Pramoj
successor2Perm Limpasawad
term_start320 April 1976
term_end323 September 1976
primeminister3Seni Pramoj
predecessor3Surin Thepkanjana
office4Minister of Foreign Affairs
term_start417 March 1975
term_end421 April 1976
primeminister4Kukrit Pramoj
predecessor4Bhichai Rattakul
successor4Bhichai Rattakul
office5Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs
term_start515 December 1972
term_end520 January 1975
primeminister5Thanom Kittikachorn
Sanya Dharmasakti
predecessor5Surin Thepkanjana
successor5Lek Nana
office6Member of the House of Representatives
term_start613 September 1992
term_end66 May 1998
constituency6Nakhon Ratchasima 1st District
term_start718 April 1983
term_end723 February 1991
constituency7Nakhon Ratchasima 1st District
term_start826 January 1975
term_end86 October 1976
constituency8Nakhon Ratchasima 1st District
birth_nameSombun Choonhavan
birth_date
birth_placeBangkok, Krung Thep, Siam (now Pom Prap Sattru Phai, Bangkok, Thailand)
death_date
death_placeLondon, England, United Kingdom
spouseBoonruen Choonhavan
children
signatureChatchai Choonhavan.png
rank
allegianceThailand
branch
serviceyears1940–1958
battles* World War II
honorific_suffixPCh MPCh MVM

| honorific-prefix = General Anand Panyarachun Sanya Dharmasakti

  • Franco-Thai War
  • Burma campaign
  • Korean War Chatichai Choonhavan (; , ; 5 April 1920 – 6 May 1998) was a Thai army officer, diplomat and politician. From 1986 to 1991, he was the chairman of the Thai Nation Party and served as the Prime Minister of Thailand from August 1988 until the 1991 coup d'état.

Family

Chatichai was the only son of Field Marshal Phin Choonhavan and Khunying Wibunlak Choonhavan. His father was the Commander-in-Chief of the Royal Thai Army from 1948 to 1954 and exerted a strong influence on the country's politics and economy. Chatichai had four sisters. The eldest was married to General Phao Siyanon, who was one of Thailand's strongmen during the 1950s. Another sister married Pramarn Adireksarn, who later became Chatichai's political ally. Chatichai married Boonruen Sopoj, a relative and confidante of Princess Mother Srinagarindrathe mother of kings Ananda Mahidol and Bhumibol Adulyadej.

Chatichai and Boonruen had two children, daughter Wanee Hongpraphas, and their son political scientist, social activist, and former senator Kraisak Choonhavan.

The former deputy prime minister Korn Dapparansi is his nephew.

Education, military and diplomatic career

Chatichai studied at Debsirin School, a long-standing, prestigious, all-boys school in Bangkok, and at the Chulachomklao Royal Military Academy. He entered active military service as second lieutenant and cavalry platoon leader in 1940. During World War II, he was assigned to the Phayap Army ("Northwest Army"), under the command of his father Phin, and participated in the invasion of the Shan States of Burma. After the war, he continued his training at the Thai Army Cavalry School and the United States Army Armor School in Fort Knox, Kentucky. In 1949, he was appointed military attaché in Washington, DC. At the age of 31, Chatichai was a major-general.

In 1951, the military, led by Chatichai's father and his brother-in-law, Phao Siyanon, effectively assumed power in Thailand in a "silent coup". They used their political influence to extend their activities to the economic sphere. Chatichai served in the Korean War as the commander of the 1st Cavalry Battalion. Then, he became director and commander of the Thai Army Armor School. In 1957, Field Marshal Sarit Thanarata rival of Chatichai's father and brother-in-lawstaged a coup d'état against the government of Prime Minister Plaek Phibunsongkhram. He ousted the Phin-Phao clique and filled the important political and military posts with his own followers. The new regime accused the Choonhavan clan (also known as the Soi Rajakru clan, after the family's residence) of having embezzled millions of dollars of public funds and hiding them in Swiss bank accounts. This ended Chatichai's military career.

Chatichai was transferred to the diplomatic service and assigned to the relatively unimportant post of ambassador to Argentina. During the following years he consecutively served as the Thai ambassador to Austria, Switzerland, Turkey, Yugoslavia, the Holy See and the United Nations. In 1972, he returned to Bangkok to become the director of the Foreign Ministry's political department.

Political career

Chatichai in 1974

In the government of Field Marshal Thanom Kittikachorn, Chatichai was appointed deputy minister of foreign affairs in 1972. During the hostage-taking in the Israeli embassy by a terrorist commando of the Palestinian Black September organisation in December 1972, he and the Agriculture Minister Dawee Chullasapya negotiated with the terrorists. In exchange for the release of the Israeli diplomats, they lent themselves as guarantees and accompanied the terrorists on their freedom flight to Cairo. Chatichai continued as deputy foreign minister after the 1973 democratic uprising, serving in the interim cabinet of Sanya Dharmasakti. In December 1973, one and a half years before Thailand officially established diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China, Chatichai and Daweewho was then minister of defencewere the first Thai government officials to visit Beijing. There, they negotiated a contract for the supply of 50,000 tons of diesel oil at a "friendship price" and promised to remove trade barriers between the two nations.

In 1974, Chatichai and his in-laws Pramarn Adireksarn and Siri Siriyothinalso major generalsfounded the conservative and aggressively anti-communist Thai Nation Party (Chart Thai). It ran in the January 1975 general election, the first democratic election after the end of military dictatorship, and became the third-strongest party. Chatichai was elected member of parliament, representing a constituency in Nakhon Ratchasima Province. The Thai Nation Party joined a government coalition under Kukrit Pramoj. Chatichai served as minister of foreign affairs from 17 March 1975 to 21 April 1976. After the snap election in April 1976, in which the Thai Nation Party expanded its share of seats significantly, he was minister of industry in the government of Seni Pramoj until it was overthrown by a military coup d'état after the Thammasat University massacre of 6 October 1976. From 1980 to 1983, Chatichai served as industry minister under Prime Minister Prem Tinsulanonda. After three years of opposition, the party returned to government and Chatichai was deputy prime minister under Prem.

Premiership

The Thai Nation Party won the most votes in the 1988 Thai general election, resulting in Chatichai being appointed prime minister on 4 August 1988. This made him the first democratically elected head of government after 12 years of dictatorship and "semi-democracy". His government improved relations with communist-ruled Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos, which had been Thailand's enemies during the Cold War. It promoted international trade with these countries and others. Chatichai's slogan was to turn Indochina "from a battlefield into a marketplace". It also supported the Sihanouk-led Government of Cambodia. Chatichai's government initiated many infrastructure projects, including an expansion of the telecommunications network in partnership with the state-owned Telephone Organization of Thailand (TOT), development of the Eastern seaboard of Thailand, and road and rail networks in partnership with the Mass Rapid Transit Authority (MRTA) in the Greater Bangkok Area. During Chatichai's premiership, Thailand's economy saw annual growth rates of up to 13 percent.

Under Chatichai's government, there was rampant corruption. The parties and politicians in Chatichai's coalition scrambled overtly over the distribution of public funds. The Thai press dubbed them the "buffet cabinet", referring to their "take-what-you-like" mentality. Chatichai's standard answer whenever he was confronted by the press with difficulties or corruption allegations against members of his government was "no problem". A parody variant, "no plomplam", became the title of a popular song by folk rock singer Aed Carabao and entered Thai common parlance. Chatichai was heavily criticised when he tried to downplay the damage caused by Typhoon Gay, which resulted in 360 deaths, in the same way.

The formerly right-wing Thai Nation Party had de-ideologized itself and now represented the interests of the rising class of provincial businessmen. It pursued policies that boosted their businesses and involved them in lucrative government contracts. It advocated a reinforcement of the role of parliament, in which politicians from the provinces were strongly represented, in contrast with the unelected power elites in the administration and military which had made political decisions during the tenure of Chatichai's predecessor, Prem Tinsulanonda. Chatichai's government emphasised the economic development of the periphery at the expense of Bangkok's big businesses and military expenditures, which it tried to cut. These policies challenged the country's traditional elites.

Disempowerment and return

On 23 February 1991, the Commander-in-Chief of the Royal Thai Army, General Sunthorn Kongsompong, and the generals of the Chulalongkorn Military Academy class 5, Suchinda Kraprayoon, Issarapong Noonpakdi, and Kaset Rojananil, formed the National Peace Keeping Council to depose Chatichai's government in a coup d'état. They accused the elected government of massive corruption and abuse of power for its own advantage. They charged several cabinet members, including Chatichai, with "unusual wealth". At the same time, they acted in the interest of the traditional elite of the bureaucracy, military and Bangkokian business circles, whose influence the Chatichai government had sought to curtail. The coup group called the form of governance under Chatichai "parliamentary dictatorship" and alleged a moral decline.

Chatichai temporarily went into exile in the United Kingdom. After his return, he continued his political activity. After the 1992 Black May, he founded the National Development Party and was again elected in his constituency in Nakhon Ratchasima.

Personal life

Chatichai was known for his fondness of cigars, fine wines, and Harley-Davidson motorcycles. Even in old age, he practised several sports and visited parties and discothèques, earning him a reputation of being a playboy.

Death

On 6 May 1998, at the age of 78, Chatichai died from liver cancer in a hospital in London.

Honours

received the following royal decorations in the Honours System of Thailand:

  • [[File:Order of Chula Chom Klao - 1st Class (Thailand) ribbon.svg|80x80px]] Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Chula Chom Klao
  • [[File:Order of the White Elephant - Special Class (Thailand) ribbon.svg|80x80px]] Knight Grand Cordon of the Most Exalted Order of the White Elephant
  • [[File:Order of the Crown of Thailand - Special Class (Thailand) ribbon.svg|80x80px]] Knight Grand Cordon of the Most Noble Order of the Crown of Thailand
  • [[File:Order of Ramkeerati ribbon.png|80x80px]] Order of Symbolic Propitiousness Ramkeerati
  • [[File:Bravery Medal (Thailand) ribbon.svg|80x80px]] Bravery Medal
  • [[File:Victory Medal - Indochina (Thailand) ribbon.svg|80x80px]] Victory Medal – Franco-Thai War
  • [[File:Victory Medal - World War II (Thailand) ribbon.svg|80x80px]] Victory Medal – Pacific War
  • [[File:Victory Medal - Korean War (Thailand) ribbon.svg|80x80px]] Victory Medal – Korean War
  • [[File:Freeman Safeguarding Medal - 1st Class (Thailand) ribbon.svg|80x80px]] Freemen Safeguarding Medal (First Class)
  • [[File:Safeguarding the Constitution Medal (Thailand) ribbon.svg|80x80px]] Safeguarding the Constitution Medal
  • [[File:Chakra Mala Medal (Thailand) ribbon.svg|80x80px]] Chakra Mala Medal
  • [[File:King Rama IX Royal Cypher Medal (Thailand) ribbon.svg|80x80px]] King Rama IX Royal Cypher Medal,1st class

Foreign honours

  • UN :
    • [[File:United Nations Service Medal Korea.png|80x80px]] United Nations Korea Medal (1952)
  • Japan :
    • [[File:JPN Zuiho-sho (WW2) 3Class BAR.svg|80x80px]] Order of the Sacred Treasure, Third Class (1955)
    • [[File:JPN Kyokujitsu-sho 1Class BAR.svg|80x80px]] Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun (1987)
  • Taiwan :
    • [[File:Special Breast Order of Yun Hui.png|80x80px]] Order of the Yunhui, Fourth Class (1957)
  • Myanmar :
    • [[File:Mahar Thray Sithu.svg|80x80px]] Maha Tharay Sithu (1958)
  • Austria :
    • [[File:AUT_Honour_for_Services_to_the_Republic_of_Austria_-_2nd_Class_BAR.svg|80x80px]] Grand Decoration of Honour in Gold of the Decoration of Honour for Services to the Republic of Austria with Sash (1964)
  • Argentina :
    • [[File:ARG Order of the Liberator San Martin - Grand Cross BAR.png|80x80px]] Grand Cross of the Order of the Liberator General San Martín (1969)
  • Philippines :
    • [[File:PHL Order of Sikatuna - Grand Cross BAR.png|80x80px]] Grand Collar of the Order of Sikatuna (1971)
  • Malaysia :
    • [[File:Order of Loyalty to the Crown of Malaysia - SSM.svg|80x80px]] Honorary Grand Commander of the Order of Loyalty to the Crown of Malaysia (1973)
  • South Korea :
    • [[File:Order of Diplomatic Service Merit (Class 1) Grand Gwanghwa Medal ribbon.gif|80x80px]] Order of Diplomatic Service Merit, Grand Gwanghwa Medal (1989)
  • Sweden :
    • [[File:Order of the Polar Star (after 1975) - Commander Grand Cross.svg|80x80px]] Commander Grand Cross of the Royal Order of the Polar Star (1990)

Military rank

  • General, Admiral and Air Chief Marshal

Volunteer Defense Corps of Thailand rank

  • Volunteer Defense Corps General

References

References

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