Under the deposed government of
Thaksin Shinawatra (2001–2006), TOT became a corporation and plans were under way to privatise a portion of the state enterprise through an
IPO on the
Stock Exchange of Thailand. These plans were cancelled after the Thaksin government was overthrown by
a coup on 19 September 2006. Soon after the coup, the junta of General
Surayud Chulanont announced plans to merge TOT with rival state telecom enterprise
CAT Telecom (formerly the
Communications Authority of Thailand). The
junta also appointed junta assistant secretary-general General
Saprang Kalayanamitr as the new chairman of the board of directors of TOT. General Saprang's first move as TOT chairman was to hand-pick three Army colonels and controversial Thaksin-critic
Vuthiphong Priebjrivat to sit on the state enterprise's board of directors. The junta cancelled the Thaksin government's telecom excise tax policy. The Thaksin government had imposed an excise tax on privately offered fixed and cellular services, and then allowed telecom companies to deduct the amount they paid in excise tax from
concession fees they had to pay to state concession owners TOT and CAT Telecom. The amount paid by the private telecom firms did not change. The Surayud government's excise tax cancellation meant that TOT and CAT Telecom would receive their full concession payments. However, TOT and CAT were then forced to increase their dividends to the Ministry of Finance to account for their increased income. In December 2009, TOT became Thailand's first 3G mobile phone service provider, launching 3G mobile phone service (Phase 1) via the brand TOT3G, by enhancing 584 base stations in Bangkok and its vicinity to accommodate 500,000 numbers for the service and with a goal of nationwide coverage by the end of 2011. ==Restructuring plan==