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Thai junta chief to visit White House next week

US President Donald Trump will host Thai junta chief Prayut Chan-O-Cha at the White House next Tuesday, in a personal coup for a Thai autocrat who was shunned by Barack Obama's administration for his regime's poor rights record.

  (Agence France-Presse)
Washington, United States
Tue, September 26, 2017

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 Thai junta chief to visit White House next week Thailand's Prime Minister Prayut Chan-O-Cha speaks during a press conference at the Peace Palace in Phnom Penh on Sept. 7, 2017. The Thai leader is a one-day official visit. (Agence France -Presse/Tang Chhin Sothy)

U

S President Donald Trump will host Thai junta chief Prayut Chan-O-Cha at the White House next Tuesday, in a personal coup for a Thai autocrat who was shunned by Barack Obama's administration for his regime's poor rights record. 

Ties between the long-time allies were strained by Prayut's 2014 coup, which ushered in Thailand's most authoritarian government in a generation.

But Trump's administration has started to reset relations with the junta government. Since he took office Washington has dispatched high-level US diplomats, including the secretary of state, whose predecessors under Obama had noticeably avoided the kingdom since the coup.

"President Trump looks forward to reaffirming the relationship between the United States and a key partner and longstanding ally in Asia, the Kingdom of Thailand," the White House said in a statement late Monday.

"They will discuss economic trade and investment, and also exchange views on the regional situation," said junta spokesman Major General Werachon Sukondhapatipak on Tuesday.

Human Rights Watch lambasted the October 3 visit, which follows an invitation Trump extended during an April phone call, as the latest sign that the US president's White House has "shamelessly thrown human rights considerations out the window."

"Doubtless Trump fails to realize that this propaganda victory for Prayut and the junta will come at the expense of the people of Thailand who will pay for it in the form of intensified repression and human rights abuses when the general gets home," said HRW's Asia Director Brad Adams.

Thailand's military has suspended democracy for more than three years, outlawing street protests, jailing dissidents and ramping up prosecutions under the kingdom's draconian royal defamation law.

In response, the US trimmed back military aid and distanced itself from the regime, though Prayut did meet President Barack Obama during a ASEAN-US summit in California last February with other regional leaders.

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