Thailand's Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra was suspended from duty by the country's constitutional court on Tuesday pending an investigation into a leaked phone call with a senior Cambodian politician, reports CNN.
Her suspension brings fresh uncertainty to the Southeast Asian kingdom, which has been roiled by years of political turbulence and leadership shake-ups.
Thailand's Constitutional Court accepted a petition brought by a group of 36 senators who accused Paetongtarn of violating the constitution for breaching ethical standards in the leaked call, which was confirmed as authentic by both sides.
Paetongtarn has faced increasing calls to resign, with anti-government protesters taking to the streets of the capital, Bangkok, on Saturday, after the leaked call with Cambodia's Hun Sen over an escalating border dispute sparked widespread anger in the country.
The scandal prompted the Bhumjaithai party, a major partner of the prime minister's government, to withdraw from the coalition last week, dealing a major blow to her Pheu Thai party's ability to hold power. Paetongtarn is also contending with plummeting approval ratings and faces a no-confidence vote in parliament.
Thailand's Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra, centre, talks to reporters at the Government House in Bangkok, Thailand, on June 19, 2025.
In the leaked call, which took place on June 15, Paetongtarn could be heard calling former Cambodian strongman Hun Sen uncle and appeared to criticise her own army's actions after border clashes led to the death of a Cambodian soldier last month.
The Thai prime minister could be heard telling Hun Sen that she was under domestic pressure and urged him not to listen to the "opposite side," in which she referred to an outspoken Thai army commander in Thailand's northeast.
She also added that if Hun Sen wants anything, he can just tell her, and she will take care of it.
Her comments in the leaked audio struck a nerve in Thailand, and opponents accused her of compromising the country's national interests.
Following the ruling, Paetongtarn said she accepts the court's decision and that her intention was truly to act for the good of the country.
She said in a press conference on Tuesday, "I want to make it clear that my intentions were more than 100 percent sincere and I acted for the country, to protect our sovereignty, to safeguard the lives of our soldiers, and to preserve peace in our nation."
"I also want to apologise to all my fellow Thais who may feel uneasy or upset about this matter," she added.
Thailand and Cambodia have had a complicated relationship of both cooperation and rivalry in recent decades. The two countries share a 508-mile (817-kilometre) land border, largely mapped by the French while they occupied Cambodia, which has periodically seen military clashes and been the source of political tensions.
In the wake of the scandal, Paetongtarn tried to downplay her remarks to Hun Sen, saying at a press conference she was trying to diffuse tensions between the two neighbours and the private call shouldn't have been made public.
The prime minister said she was using a negotiation tactic and her comments were not a statement of allegiance.
Paetongtarn became prime minister last year after the Constitutional Court ruled that her predecessor, Srettha Thavisin, had breached ethics rules and voted to dismiss him as prime minister.
The same court also dissolved the country's popular progressive Move Forward Party, which won the most seats in the 2023 election, and banned its leaders from politics for 10 years.
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