BREAKING: Thai PM Paetongtarn Shinawatra Suspended By Constitutional Court Amid Political Turmoil | World News

Thailand’s Constitutional Court continued to wait for a lawsuit that filed a petition with prime minister Paetongarn Shinawatra on Tuesday. This movement greatly increases the pressure on a government already placed on a few facades.
The court said in a statement that he had received a petition by 36 senators. The petition is Hun Sen, the powerful former leader of Cambodia.
While the court listens to the case, a Deputy Prime Minister will rule the government as a guard. Paetongarn, however, continues as a new Minister of Culture after a recent change. The government could not be reached to comment immediately about the suspension.
Controversial phone call fuel anger
The telephone conversation with Cambodia to alleviate the increasing border tensions with Cambodia caused widespread anger at home. In the call, 38-year-old Paetongarn was claimed to be “Kowtowed” to Hun Sen, and criticized a Thai army commander-a very sensitive movement in a country where he has too much power. He then apologized and said that his comments were a negotiation tactic.
The results of the leak reduced Paetongtonn’s coalition to a naked majority. An important party has already left the coalition, and soon, while an insecure movement was made in Parliament, the protesters still want the Prime Minister to resign.
The growing problems of the Shinawatra Dynasty
Paetongarn’s traumas emphasize the diminishing power of the Pheu Thai Party, just 10 months before the premiere. This populist political giant, which was fueled by the billionaire Shinawatra clan, has led the Thai elections since 2001, and survived several military coup and court orders that overthrew successive governments and prime ministers.
Premier was a “fire baptism” for the political novice, the youngest prime minister of Thailand. He took over from Srettha Thavisin, who was dismissed by the Constitutional Court on the allegations of ethics on the appointment of a minister. Paetongarn’s management is struggling to restore a stuttering economy, and its popularity has fallen significantly, and an opinion questionnaire dated June 19-25 shows that the approval grade fell from 30.9% to 9.2% in March.
Paetongarn’s problems are not alone. Former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who is clearly considered to be behind his administration, has great legal difficulties in two separate courts this month.
In accordance with his lawyer, his controversial king Thaksin was accused of insulting the country’s effective monarchy at his first hearing at the criminal court in Bangkok on Tuesday – a crime that could be sentenced to 15 years in prison. Thaksin rejected the charges and repeatedly swore loyalty to his crown. The case was launched with a 2015 media interview with Tycoon during his self -imposed exile. In 2023, he returned to Thailand to Thailand 15 years later to devote time for the abuse of power and conflict of interest, but he escaped from prison controversially, and six months of hospital was detained last February. This month, the Supreme Court will examine the time of stay in the hospital and send it back to jail.