Background
Thanin is a son of Hae and Pa-ob Kraivichien. His father was a Chinese-born merchant and owner of one of the biggest pawnshops in Bangkok.
politician university professor
Thanin is a son of Hae and Pa-ob Kraivichien. His father was a Chinese-born merchant and owner of one of the biggest pawnshops in Bangkok.
Thanin studied law at Thammasat University, graduating in 1948. He graduated in 1953, and in 1958 was called to the Bar at Gray"s Inn.
He was the 14th prime minister of Thailand between 1976 and 1977. He then went to the London School of Economics to continue with his law studies. They five children.
After he returned to Thailand in 1954, Thanin worked in the ministry of justice, becoming an associate judge.
He rose quickly, finally becoming President of the Supreme Court of Thailand.
Additionally, he taught law at the Thammasat and Chulalongkorn University and the Thai bar association. After the Thammasat University massacre of 6 October 1976, the democratically elected prime minister Seni Pramoj was toppled by a military coup led by Admiral Sangad Chaloryu.
Two days later, King Bhumibol Adulyadej appointed his favourite Thanin to be the interim prime minister. Thanin insisted on selecting his cabinet himself and rejected most of the military junta"s nominations.
The military only occupied the positions of deputy prime minister and deputy minister of defence.
Thanin"s was the first Thai cabinet in which women held ministerial posts: Wimolsiri Chamnarnvej and Lursakdi Sampatisiri. Thanin was seen as honest and intelligent, but also as eminently ideological and politically extreme. After his taking office, he sent police special forces to notoriously liberal book shops, and ordered the confiscation and burning of 45,000 books, including works of Thomas More, George Orwell and Maxim Gorky.
He announced that Thailand could only return to democratic rule after 12 years.
Thanin"s crackdown on trade unions, progressive students" and farmers" associations drove their activists into the underground structures of the Communist Party of Thailand. Instead of weakening the communists, it fuelled their armed struggle against the government.
In March 1977, a group of younger army officers known as the "Young Turks", who had an interest in political matters, tried to topple Thanin. Their attempted coup failed.
On 20 October 1977, however, Admiral Sangad again seized power and pressed Thanin to resign.
The military justified their intervention because Thanin"s government had divided the country, had virtually no public support, the economic situation had worsened and people in general disagreed with such a long-term suspension of democracy. King Bhumibol immediately appointed Thanin to his Privy Council.
As an avocation, he published books that admonished of the dangers of communism. He had a television show in which he attacked communism, the students" movement, and progressive politicians. The parliament was dissolved and all political parties outlawed.
Since then, he has been a member of the Privy Council. After the democratic uprising against military dictatorship in 1973, Thanin was a member of the transitional legislative assembly appointed by the king. He also became a member of the far-right anti-communist Nawaphon movement.