"I felt under pressure. I tried to
improve myself but what I could not stand was to see my mother stressed,"
an emotional Weluree told reporters in Bangkok Monday.
After the 22-year-old won the competition on
May 17, scathing comments predating the contest were found on her Facebook
page. They referred to pro-government demonstrators, who are known as "red
shirts," as "dirty" and "evil activists" that
should "all be executed."
"I am not neutral. I am on the side of
His Majesty the King," Weluree said in a now-deleted Facebook comment from
November, when the country's political crisis began, according to local news site Khaosod English.
Weluree reportedly said Thailand would be
cleaner if the "dirty" red shirts left the country.
Pro-government supporters questioned
Weluree's pageant victory on popular online forums and
social media sites. A Facebook page in protest of her winning the competition
garnered thousands of "likes" -- although some users criticized her
appearance and claimed she won because of her connections, rather than raising
concerns about her anti-red shirt comments.
Other netizens seemed to be preoccupied with comparing Weluree's appearance to that of Nissa Katerahong,
who won the Miss Tiffany's Universe transgender beauty contest in Pattaya last
month.
Weluree -- an actress, talk show host, and
English student -- apologized for her remarks on May 19. "I was careless.
I was young. I did it recklessly," she said in an interview on Thailand's
Channel 3.
But the unrelenting public scorn appears to
have worn her down.
"At first, my family was happy for me
when I was crowned," Weluree said Monday. "But there's no more
happiness following waves of criticism from the society." She said the
decision was hers alone, and thanked the pageant judges and her fans for their
support.
It is unclear whether Weluree's crown will be
passed to the competition's runner-up and audience favorite Pimbongkod
"Ellie" Chankaew.
The pageant controversy emerged at the height
of a political crisis that has plagued Thailand for months, and prompted the
military to seize power in a coup in May.
The turmoil began in November when the
government attempted to pass a controversial amnesty bill that would have
cleared the way for the return of then-prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra's
brother, Thaksin, to politics. The former prime minister and tycoon has been
living in self-imposed exile to avoid a corruption conviction, after being
overthrown in a military coup in 2006.
Since November, the People's Democratic
Reform Committee led anti-government protesters, who were mostly middle-class
royalists, in calling for Yingluck's government to be replaced with an
unelected "people's council."
Competing rallies were held by pro-government
supporters, many of whom came from the country's rural north and northeast and
view Yingluck's ouster as a "judicial coup."
Yingluck was found guilty of abuse of power
and removed from office along with several cabinet ministers on May 7, and indicted
by Thailand's anti-graft body.
In a televised address on May 22, Thailand's
army chief General Prayuth Chan-ocha announced that the country
had been placed under military control. Since then, the junta has imposed a
series of measures purportedly aimed at restoring order and resolving the
crisis, including curfews, bans on public assembly, and media blackouts.
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