The Phnom Penh Post

EX-Thai PM Yingluck ‘ditched phones before escape’

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FUGITIVE former premier Yingluck Shinawatra discarded her mobile phones and stopped travelling in her usual vehicles in the days before last week’s dramatic escape, Thailand’s army chief said yesterday, as her party vowed to fight on.

Yingluck, whose government was toppled by the military in 2014, staged a disappeari­ng act before a scheduled court judgment last Friday in a criminal negligence trial.

She faced up to 10 years in prison and a lifetime ban from politics if convicted. But instead she was a no-show, with junta and party sources saying she had fled abroad.

Thailand’s junta has come under fire from some conservati­ve allies over Yingluck’s disappeara­nce, with many questionin­g how the authoritar­ian regime could have let her flee given that she was heavily monitored.

Army chief General Chalermcha­i Sitthisad gave a lengthy defence yesterday, which offered insights into how military intelligen­ce kept track of Yingluck and how she might have slipped the net.

“As of now we learned that she abandoned all of her phones and changed her cars so it was hard to trace her using the same methods we did before,” he told reporters, confirming military intelligen­ce had previously used electronic and physical surveillan­ce.

But Chalermcha­i said officers had recently been withdrawn from guarding the front of her Bangkok house.

“The public alleged that it was violating her personal rights and intimidati­ng her so we withdrew the force,” he said.

Yingluck frequently complained of being constantly followed by military intelligen­ce since she was ousted from office.

In its first statement since her disappeara­nce, Yingluck’s Pheu Thai Party vowed to stay together and push for a democratic Thailand despite losing its figurehead.

“The party believes the former prime minister will explain to the public [her decision to flee] at the proper time,” the statement said.

Thai media have been full of speculatio­n about how she might have escaped, with most suggesting she went to Cambodia either by land or sea in the days before the court verdict and then on to Singapore.

A senior junta source said they believed she had fled to Dubai, the base of Shinawatra family patriarch Thaksin, a billionair­e who is Yingluck’s older brother.

Chalermcha­i said he thought it was unlikelyYi­ngluck would have been able to fly directly out of Thailand given security procedures at airports, even for private flights. Instead, he said, a land or sea exit was more likely.

But he added that once outside Thailand she likely took a private flight organised by Thaksin.

“I believe that former prime minister Thaksin prepared a plan for her, for example a private aircraft that regular people cannot find,” he said.

The Shinawatra political dynasty began under Thaksin in 2001 with a series of groundbrea­king welfare schemes that won them votes and the loyalty of the rural poor. But their popularity rattled the royalist and armyaligne­d elite, who assailed successive government­s linked to the clan with coups, court cases and protests.

 ?? MONEY SHARMA/AFP ?? Indian activists protest outside the Chinese Embassy in New Delhi on July 7.
MONEY SHARMA/AFP Indian activists protest outside the Chinese Embassy in New Delhi on July 7.
 ?? LILLIAN SUWANRUMPH­A/AFP ?? There has been speculatio­n that ex-Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra went to Cambodia and then on to Singapore.
LILLIAN SUWANRUMPH­A/AFP There has been speculatio­n that ex-Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra went to Cambodia and then on to Singapore.

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