Thailand's former queen Sirikit dies aged 93
People hold portraits of Thailand's former Queen Sirikit as they gather in front of Chulalongkorn Hospital in Bangkok where she passed away late Friday © Chanakarn Laosarakham / AFP
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Thailand's former Queen Sirikit, the mother of the current
King Vajiralongkorn and wife of the nation's longest-reigning monarch, died
late Friday at the age of 93, the palace said.
The royal family is venerated in Thailand, treated by many
as semi-divine figures and lavished with glowing media coverage and
gold-adorned portraits hanging in public spaces and private homes nationwide.
"It is a great loss to the nation," said Prime
Minister Anutin Charnvirakul on Saturday, adding that he would delay his
departure to a weekend summit of Southeast Asian leaders in Malaysia.
Throughout her 66-year marriage to King Bhumibol Adulyadej,
Sirikit carved a dual reputation as a fashionista and the nation's caring
matriarch -- with some Western media featuring her on magazine covers and
comparing her to former US first lady Jackie Kennedy.
"I had heard that she had been unwell and, given that
she was in her 90s, I knew this day would come," 53-year-old housekeeper
Sasis Putthasit said early Saturday in the capital, Bangkok.
"But I didn't expect it to be today," Sasis told
AFP. "I feel sad because she was a mother figure to the country, and now
she's gone."
Sirikit had "suffered several illnesses" while
hospitalised since 2019, including a blood infection this month, the palace
said in a statement.
"Her majesty's condition worsened until Friday and she
passed away... at Chulalongkorn hospital at age 93," it added.
King Vajiralongkorn has assigned members of the royal family
to begin a year-long mourning period, the palace said.
From early Saturday, Thai news anchors were seen wearing
black during broadcasts, a sign of public mourning.
Her passing "marks a profoundly significant event for
the Thai Royal Family and the entire nation, given her immense popularity and
deep connection to the late king who remains deeply revered", Pavin
Chachavalpongpun, a former Thai diplomat and academic who studies the monarchy,
told AFP.
King Bhumibol Adulyadej's lengthy reign from 1946 until 2016
was bookended by World War II and the first inauguration of US President Donald
Trump.
Though Bhumibol's son inherited the throne about nine years
ago, many still revere him as the nation's most steadfast figurehead -- and
Sirikit as his constant companion.
She retired from the public eye in recent years as she
suffered from ailing health, her privacy sealed by strict lese majeste laws
that limit what can be reported about the royal family.
But in her glamorous heyday in the 1960s she mingled with US
presidents and superstars such as Elvis Presley, while at home touring Thailand
to visit villagers in rural areas.
She was referred to as the "Mother of the Nation"
and her birthday was designated the country's Mothers' Day.
Store owner Tanyaporn Arammetha, whose own parents divorced,
said she always saw the late king and queen as parental figures.
"(Sirikit) showed me that she cared about Thai people
the way parents love their children," she said.
The reigning Chakri dynasty dates back to 1782, but the
succession from King Vajiralongkorn is unclear as he has not formally named an
heir.
He has seven children including five sons -- four from an
earlier marriage who have been officially disowned, and his 20-year-old son
Dipangkorn Rasmijoti.
While the royal family is still held in very high regard by
most Thais, it faced unprecedented public dissent during street protests in
2020.
Tens of thousands of young protesters took to the streets
demanding widespread political reforms including changes to the monarchy -- a
public challenge to the royals' status never seen in Thailand before.
Though Thailand's constitution places the monarchy above
politics, Sirikit drew public attention when she attended the funeral of a
royalist protester in 2008.
When her husband King Bhumibol died, Thailand observed a
year-long mourning period.
Authorities ordered flags to fly at half-mast for 30 days,
banned weddings and concerts, and instructed citizens to wear black.
Former Queen Sirikit's body will lie in state at the Grand
Palace's Dusit Thorne Hall in the capital Bangkok, according to the palace.
Frozen food company employee Siraphob Sutthisalakorn said
Thailand had "lost two guiding figures" in Queen Sirikit and her husband
King Bhumibol.


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