Narong Wongwan

Narong Wongwan (Thai: ณรงค์ วงศ์วรรณ; born 25 December 1925) is a former Thai Prime Minister-designate, politician and tobacco industrialist. He was a long-term member of parliament representing Phrae, leader of the United Thai Party and the Justice Unity Party. He was publicly known as the "godfather" (jao pho) of Phrae[1][2] or even "godfather of the North".[3][4]

Life and career

Narong Wongwan was born in Phrae, where his grandfather had acquired a fortune from wood production. Narong studied economics in the United States. After working for the family's saw mill for some time, he went into tobacco growing and curing in the 1950s. During the 1970s the tobacco business in Northern Thailand boomed and Narong became a multi-millionaire. Many peasants of Phrae and the neighbouring provinces were employed on Narong's and his family's plantations and in their curing plants. Therefore, he accumulated considerable economic and social influence in the region. This was used by him as a base for his political career.

Narong was a member of Phrae's provincial council as early as 1949. He founded the United Thai Party and was elected member of parliament in 1979. He was steadily re-elected in all elections until 1992. He joined the government of prime minister Prem Tinsulanonda, becoming deputy interior minister in 1980, deputy minister of agriculture in 1981, rising to be minister in 1983. After the election of 1986, his party was in the opposition. In 1989, he merged his party with three minor parties and renamed it Solidarity Party. After a cabinet reshuffle, the party became part of Chatichai Choonhavan's government coalition and Narong was again made minister of agriculture.[1]

After the coup d'état of 1991 and ahead of the election in March 1992, he joined with other provincial businessmen, bureaucrats and supporters of the military coup group to form the Justice Unity Party, of which he became the chairman. The party won the election and Narong was designated prime minister, when media alleged that the United States had refused him entry admission due to the suspection of involvement in drug trafficking. The US government threatened that relations between the two countries could worsen in case that Narong became head of government.[5] He had to relinquish premiership and the parliament instead nominated the putschist General Suchinda Kraprayoon.[6] Really, Narong had not been prosecuted as there was no sufficient evidence. As the leader of the biggest coalition party, Narong still became deputy prime minister under Suchinda. After the bloody crackdown on the oppositional movement protesting against the military-backed government, the Justice Unity Party was discredited and dissolved.[7] Narong instead joined the Thai Nation Party. After the party's electoral success in 1995, Narong was poised to become minister of interior, but again he was hindered by allegations of criminal activity.[4] In 2000, Thailand's Supreme Court condemned the tabloid newspaper Khao Sot for spreading false allegations against Narong.[8]

References

  1. 1 2 Pasuk Phongpaichit; Sungsidh Piriyarangsan (1996), Corruption & Democracy in Thailand, Silkworm Books, pp. 80–81
  2. Ockey, James (2004), Making Democracy: Leadership, Class, Gender, and Political Participation in Thailand, University of Hawai'i Press, pp. 40, 203
  3. LoGerfo, James P. (2000), "Beyond Bangkok: The Provincial Middle Class in the 1992 Protests", Money & Power in Provincial Thailand, NIAS Publishing, p. 232
  4. 1 2 Fabre, Guilhem (2003), Criminal Prosperity: Drug Trafficking, Money Laundering and Financial Crisis after the Cold War, Routledge, p. 122
  5. Ockey, James (2000), "The Rise of Local Power in Thailand: Provincial Crime, Elections and the Bureaucracy", Money & Power in Provincial Thailand, NIAS Publishing, p. 89
  6. LoGerfo, James P. (2000), "Beyond Bangkok: The Provincial Middle Class in the 1992 Protests", Money & Power in Provincial Thailand, NIAS Publishing, p. 233
  7. Surin Maisrikrod (1992), Thailand's Two General Elections in 1992: Democracy Sustained, Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, p. 24
  8. Streckfuss, David (2011), Truth on Trial in Thailand: Defamation, Treason, and Lèse-Majesté, Routledge, pp. 171–172
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