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    HomeAsiaThai parliament to open amid scrutiny over election ballots

    Thai parliament to open amid scrutiny over election ballots

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    BANGKOK, March 14 (Reuters) - Thai ‌King Maha Vajiralongkorn is to open parliament on Saturday, ​as last month's general election result faces court scrutiny over barcodes on the ballots that ⁠may have violated the law.

    The barcodes might undermine the secrecy of the ballot, said the country's Office of the Ombudsman, which petitioned the Constitutional ​Court to consider the case.

    Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul's Bhumjaithai Party won a clear victory in ‌the February 8 election, but the ombudsman said late on Friday that there had been 21 complaints from the public that barcodes and QR codes on ⁠the ballots could potentially be used to identify which party ⁠or candidate a given voter had chosen.

    The court annulled a 2006 election on the grounds that the voting process had not been conducted in secret.

    The Election Commission has said the barcodes were included for security purposes and ‌that identifying a voter would require access to the upper half of ⁠the ballots, which were securely stored.

    Bhumjaithai, which won at ‌least 191 seats in the 500-member parliament, has ​said it will form a ruling coalition with the third-place Pheu Thai Party and several smaller groups, giving the alliance more than 290 seats ‌and raising the prospect of a stable government ​after years of political volatility.

    Lawmakers are ⁠scheduled to reconvene on Sunday to endorse a new house ‌speaker and two deputy speakers.

    Deputy Prime ⁠Minister Sophon Zaram, a veteran Bhumjaithai politician, told reporters on Thursday that the party had nominated him for the speaker's post. The new speaker is expected ​to schedule a parliamentary ‌session to vote in the prime minister.

    Bhumjaithai deputy leader Siripong Angkasakulkiat told Reuters ⁠the vote for prime minister will ​likely take place on Thursday.

    (Reporting by Panarat Thepgumpanat, Chayut Setboonsarng and ​Panu Wongcha-um; Editing by William Mallard)

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