The military government, which had banned criticism of the proposed constitution prior to its release, will hold a public referendum on the charter in August. That will be followed by elections that junta chief Prayuth Chan-ocha has promised for 2017.
"We have done our job," Meechai Ruchupan, chairman of the junta-appointed Constitution Drafting Commission, told reporters as he held a copy of the 105-page, 279-article draft charter.
"The important thing about this constitution, although there is no statement that people have the power - everybody has rights, everybody is equal, everybody is provided with protection," Meechai said.
The charter, which was posted on the drafting commission's website Tuesday, also includes a vaguely worded provision that critics say could allow the prime minister to be appointed rather than elected.
Also Read
Ahead of its release, the military government banned criticism of the charter, and over the weekend detained a politician for a Facebook posting saying Prayuth should resign as prime minister if the constitution is rejected at the polls.
Prayuth has justified the military takeover as necessary to restore order after years of political upheaval and to rid Thailand of corruption and abuse of power. He has insisted that the new constitution will help him achieve those goals.
Prayuth has vowed to hold elections in mid-2017, but has not specified what would happen if the constitution is rejected.