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Thaksin faces royal insult charge as Thai court begins trial

Tan KW
Publish date: Mon, 19 Aug 2024, 04:11 PM
Tan KW
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Former Thai leader Thaksin Shinawatra appeared in a Bangkok court on Monday as it began scrutinising evidence in a royal insult case against him, just days after his daughter became the Southeast Asian nation’s new prime minister.

Thaksin, accompanied by his lawyers, went into the court clad in a yellow shirt, a colour that symbolises loyalty to the monarchy. His court appearance came a day after he received a royal amnesty that ended his commuted one-year sentence in separate corruption cases, allowing him to walk free two weeks earlier than the end of his parole.

The two-time former prime minister and the de facto leader of the ruling Pheu Thai party, was indicted in June by prosecutors under the stringent lese majeste law that protects the royal family from criticism and a cyber crime law.

“There’s not much to it,” Thaksin said in brief remarks to reporters when he arrived at the court. “This case came about shortly after the coup so it’s about the coup-makers using the law to tighten power.”

The charges against Thaksin, 75, stemmed from an interview he gave in Seoul in 2015 in the wake of a coup that dislodged his sister’s government a year earlier. Prosecutors deemed his comments to have breached Article 112 of Thailand’s penal code, which carries a maximum jail term of 15 years for each offence of defaming the monarchy.

Thaksin is out on bail but has been barred from travelling outside the country without the court’s permission.

The former premier denied the charges on Monday and submitted a list of 14 witnesses to the court as well as other evidence, his lawyer Winyat Chatmontree said. The prosecution has enlisted 10 witnesses too, he said.

The witnesses will be summoned for questioning over seven separate hearings in July next year, which Thaksin plans to attend Winyat said. On Monday, Thaksin’s legal team argued that the video of the interview in question had been edited to mislead viewers and the clip couldn’t be verified in its full entirely.

Paetongtarn Shinawatra, Thaksin’s youngest daughter, on Friday won the parliamentary vote to become Thailand’s new prime minister. Paetongtarn was picked for the premier post after the country’s Constitutional Court dismissed Srettha Thavisin in an ethics violation case, cutting his time in office to only less than a year.

Thaksin returned to Thailand from a 15-year exile the same day Srettha became the prime minister last year - events seen as part of a deal that the former leader cut with the royalist establishment to help pro-military and conservative parties stay in power after nearly a decade of military-backed rule under a former army chief.

The truce brought an end to the conflict that had shaped Thai politics for the past two decades. But Srettha’s dismissal and the lese majeste persecution against Thaksin have raised fresh questions if the agreement would really hold. 

 


  - Bloomberg

 

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