Yahoo – AFP,
November 11, 2017
Bangkok
(AFP) - A senior Thai royal official has been sacked for "evil acts"
including having an extramarital affair and forcing his alleged mistress to get
an abortion, the palace said, the latest top aide to be axed under King Maha
Vajiralongkorn.
Vajiralongkorn,
65, took the throne one year ago following the death of his widely revered
father King Bhumibol Adulyadej, who reigned for seven decades.
He has yet
to attain his father's widespread popularity but remains insulated from any
criticism by one of the world's harshest royal defamation laws.
Since
ascending the throne the new monarch has axed a number of powerful palace
officials from his father's era.
The latest
aide to fall from grace is Distorn Vajarodaya, a senior official in the Royal
Household Bureau who served as Grand Chamberlain under the late King Bhumibol
and was often seen by the ailing monarch's side during the final years of his
reign.
A statement
published by the Royal Gazette late Friday stripped Distorn of his royal
decorations and listed his alleged wrongdoings -- including having an
extramarital affair, "forcing" his mistress to get an abortion, and
then coercing her into marrying another man.
"When
the woman got pregnant for the second time, he forced her to have another
abortion but the woman refused. So he forced her to get married with another
man she hadn't had a relationship with," the statement said.
Distorn was
also accused of "using the King's name to avoid taxation in importing a
foreign vehicle" to replace a damaged royal car.
The aide
also allegedly ordered staff to forge documents about a donation to a royal
foundation he chaired.
Thailand's
lese majeste law, which criminalises insulting the monarchy with up to 15 years
in prison per offence, makes it impossible to publicly counter such charges.
Many of
those purged from the new monarch's inner circle have been charged with lese
majeste and jailed.
In one of
the most dramatic episodes, Vajiralongkorn divorced his third wife in late 2014
after half a dozen of her relatives were charged with lese majeste -- and later
jailed -- for allegedly abusing their royal ties to him.
All media
inside Thailand must heavily self-censor when reporting on the royal family to
avoid falling foul of the defamation law.

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