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- WORLD, Page 38World NotesTHAILANDA Whiff of Opium
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- When a pro-Western military junta wants to win favor with the
- U.S., the preferred course includes holding relatively fair
- elections, then standing on the sidelines as a pliant civilian
- government is installed. If all goes well, the result may be
- more money from U.S. aid agencies. That is, unless the proposed
- new Prime Minister is an alleged drug trafficker.
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- Then, as Thailand discovered last week, the result can be
- embarrassment and uncertainty. The designee is Narong Wongwan,
- 66, a lumber and tobacco millionaire whose pro-military Justice
- and Unity Party won the most seats in Thailand's first
- parliamentary elections since a bloodless coup 13 months ago.
- Soon after Narong was named to head a five-party coalition
- government, Washington officials disclosed that he had been
- denied a visa to enter the U.S. last July because of alleged
- links to Thailand's opium and heroin trade.
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- Thai police said they had no evidence to support the U.S.
- allegations, which Narong denied. But his military patrons
- showed signs of backing away from Narong, leaving his
- appointment in doubt.
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