Former Thai PM Yingluck Shinawatra has 'fled country' ahead of trial verdict
Thailand's former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra has fled the country as a court was about to deliver a verdict in a two-year trial over agricultural subsidies, a source close to her family says.
The
source declined to say where she had gone, but Thailand's top
immigration official said there were no records of Yingluck having left
through proper channels.
Yingluck
failed to show up to hear the verdict being delivered. Her lawyer said
she was ill but the court rejected the explanation and Thailand's
Supreme Court issued an arrest warrant.
The lawyer, Norawit Larleang, told CNN that he didn't know whether the former prime minister was in Thailand or had left.
Yingluck
-- ousted by a military coup in 2014 -- had been barred from leaving
Thailand without court approval since 2015, when her trial started.
Her bail of 30 million baht ($900,000), posted when the trial began more than two years ago has been confiscated.
Yingluck
faced up to 10 years in prison for alleged negligence over a
rice-buying scheme, which cost the country billions of dollars. The
court has set a new date for the verdict of September 27.
Yingluck in 2016: 'I've never thought of fleeing'
In 2016, Yingluck pledged to see through her trial, and said that she had not considered leaving the country.
"I stand firm to fight my case. All eyes are on me. I have duties and responsibilities to carry on.
"I assure you, I've never thought of fleeing."
The
rice subsidy program, introduced in 2011, pledged to pay farmers well
above the market rate for their crop, and ended up costing the country
billions.
But critics
said it wasted large amounts of public funds trying to please rural
voters, hurting exports and leaving the government with huge stockpiles
of rice it couldn't sell without losing money.
Yingluck
said the rice subsidy scheme was "beneficial for the farmers and the
country" and that claims it lost money were wrong and motivated by
political bias against her.
'Big surprise'
Yingluck's
no-show was a "big surprise" to most people in Thailand, Thitinan
Pongsudhirak, a political scientist at Chulalongkorn University told
CNN.
"The way that she had fought, it had looked like she was willing to go through with (the trial).
Thitinan said Yingluck's decision to skip the verdict hearing will have "emboldened" the military government.
"They
would not have wanted to put her in jail, in this scenario, (but her
not showing up today) puts her on the back foot and gives them an edge."
There was only "low risk" of unrest following her absence, he added.
"The
military government have been suppressing dissent and suppressing
demonstrations. (Her supporters are) fanned out over the country so it
is hard for them to mobilize."
Crowds gathered
Hundreds
of Yingluck's supporters who'd been waiting outside the court for the
verdict quickly dispersed once word spread the former Prime Minister
hadn't appeared.
Thai
police had deployed 3,000 officers to the streets ahead of the hearing
to guard against potential protests. At one stage, lines of police stood
ready to repel any demonstrations.
As
many as 1,000 supporters had gathered to hear the verdict, lining up
behind barricades and crowding footpaths in nearby streets. Many were
dressed in black to mourn the late King Bhumibol Adulyadej, who died
last October.
The crowds came despite a plea from Yingluck on Facebook to stay away from the court due to security concerns.
Reporters
outside the government complex which houses the Supreme Court said her
supporters were ignoring police requests to stay in predetermined
protest areas.
Fall from power
When she was inaugurated in 2011, Yingluck became Thailand's first female prime minister and its youngest in over 60 years.
After the 2014 coup, she was impeached by Thailand's military-appointed National Legislative Assembly. The ruling barred her from political office for five years.
At the time, Yingluck said she had behaved with integrity and honesty during her time as prime minister.
Amid
the outcry over the rice subsidy scandal, Yingluck was investigated by
Thailand's National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) for the rice
subsidy issue and put on trial. Proceedings have lasted more than two
years.
Thaksin Shinawatra,
Yingluck's brother, was overthrown as Prime Minister in a military coup
in 2006. Thaksin is living in self-imposed exile to avoid corruption
charges.
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