Page 78 - Rights beautiful : collection of Professor Saneh Chamarik
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Rights Beautiful Collection of Professor Saneh Chamarik


                             among the urban middle classes, popularly known as Black May, the
                             following year. This time around, the whole country came under enormous
                             and nationwide pressure and demand for political reform. “Reform” now
                             becomes the catchword reflecting the rising and restless expectations
                             among Thai people at all levels of society. It turned explosive to the critical
                             point that the old-time politicians were obliged, however reluctantly and
                             half-heartedly, to bend to the popular will to have created a new and reform-
                             spirited Constitution.
                                    However, the gap between the newly-acquired rights and liberties
                             as written into the Constitution, and the reality of power of enforcement
                             still very much remains. Such a political predicament vividly reminds one
                             of the late Sir Josiah Crosby, British Ambassador at the time of the 1932
                             Revolution, who articulated the grave concern for democracy without the
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                             force of public opinion.  More often than not, they are nonchalantly ignored
                             under popularly-elected parliamentary rule. The state of affairs seems not
                             much different from the previous authoritarian one. The big difference is
                             that the people now are so articulate and much better aware and inquisitive
                             of what has been going on in the country and the world outside. Besides,
                             there arise increasing number of non-governmental and civil society groups,
                             as well as all sorts of mass media, to pose collectively and often aggressively
                             as watchdog against any wrong doings on the part of the power that be.
                                    This is roughly what the Thai NHRC finds itself in. It took a
                             fairly long and complicated process to get the whole 11-member Commission
                             elected through a selection committee and the Senate, and then royally
                             appointed. The selection committee’s composition is interesting. Its 27
                             members include 4 from state agencies, 5 from academic institutions, 10 from
                             private organizations, 5 political from political parties, and 3 from public
                             media. Each nomination must be passed by votes of not less than ¾ of all



                             7
                              Josiah Crosby, Siam: The Crossroads, London, Hollis and Carter Ltd., 1945, pp. 89-90 and
                             152-153.
                              72                  OFFICE OF THE NATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION OF THAILAND
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