The Nation

BANGKOK: -- Privy Council president General Prem Tinsulanonda will attend a government function this Friday to thank officials and volunteers involved in flood relief efforts, senior government figures said yesterday.
However, Prem's close aide said yesterday that HM the King's chief adviser had not yet received any invitation from the government to attend the event.
Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra said the government had invited Prem to preside over the event, entitled "Love Thailand, Move Thailand Ahead", to be held at Government House on Friday evening.
Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Kittiratt Na Ranong said Prem had agreed to take part in the function. "There is no problem. He will certainly come," Kittiratt said, referring to Prem.
Kittiratt had called on Prem and extended the government's invitation himself, according to caretaker government spokeswoman Thitima Chaisang. "General Prem accepted the invitation. There is no need for a formal letter of confirmation. The words by the Privy Council president are as strong as a mountain," she said.
The prime minister will also attend the function, which will be her second public meeting with Prem. The first was a gala event last month hosted by the Army.
ACM Prajun Tamprateep, head of the Privy Council President's Office, said yesterday his office had not received any letter of invitation for Prem to attend the function this Friday.
"I cannot tell whether General Prem will be able to attend," he said, adding that the Prime Minister's Office secretary-general Bantoon Suphakwanit should be able to give a better answer.
Bantoon said the government assigned Kittiratt to extend the invitation himself and Prajun had just phoned to inform that Prem agreed to attend the function.
The government is hosting the event to thank all groups involved in tackling the severe floods last year, according to PM's Office Minister Niwatthamrong Boonsongpaisan. He said the function was aimed at restoring confidence in Thailand.
Among the guests will be foreign diplomats, business people, senior bureaucrats, privy councillors, Cabinet members, the heads of independent organisations and military commanders, according to Niwatthamrong. The event will be broadcast on Modernine TV and Thai PBS.
Niwatthamrong said there was no political implication in the invitation to Prem, who was previously accused by Pheu Thai Party politicians and their red-shirt supporters of being behind the coup in 2006 that overthrew the government of Thaksin Shinawatra.
"This is a good opportunity for all groups of Thais to unite for our country's progress," he said.
Red-shirts' spokesman Worawut Wichaidit said the group would not interfere with the government's decision to invite Prem to preside over the event. "If [it] is aimed at reconciliation, the red shirts will not oppose it. We see it as a good thing," he said.
Meanwhile, Democrat Party spokesman Chavanond Intarakomalyasut yesterday criticised the government for holding a party at a time when many victims were finding it hard to recover from the flood and still had not received the Bt5,000 in aid promised by the government.

-- The Nation 2012-02-07













