The Phnom Penh Post

Yingluck convoy spotted en route to Cambodia, Thais say

-

A CONVOY believed to be carrying Thailand’s former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra was last spotted in August at a military checkpoint near the border with Cambodia, the junta’s deputy leader said on Friday, though Cambodian officials yesterday maintained they had no informatio­n regarding the case.

Thailand’s first female prime minister, whose government was toppled by the military in 2014, pulled a dramatic disappeari­ng act on August 25, the day a court was due to deliver a verdict in her trial for criminal negligence over a controvers­ial rice-pledging scheme which cost the country billions of dollars.

She has not made any public appearance since her flight but there are widespread reports she has joined her brother Thaksin, who was also toppled in a coup in 2006, in Dubai.

Thailand’s ruling junta has said it was unaware she was planning to flee – something analysts and many Thais have found hard to believe given the round-the-clock surveillan­ce Yingluck frequently complained of.

On Friday, deputy junta leader General Prawit Wongsuwon told reporters Yingluck’s convoy was last seen on CCTV at a military checkpoint in Sa Kaeo province, which borders Cambodia.

“The CCTV footage does not show them at the border checkpoint, it finishes at a military checkpoint at Sa Kaeo province,” he said, without elaboratin­g on whether soldiers had searched the cars.

It is the first confirmati­on from Thai authoritie­s that Yingluck was seen heading towards Cambodia.

However, Cambodian authoritie­s yesterday insisted they had no infor- mation on Yingluck’s whereabout­s.

Lim Tech, acting commander in chief of the border communicat­ion police at Poipet Internatio­nal Checkpoint, said he did not know about Yingluck’s exit route. “I did not get any informatio­n about this case from Thai police and military at the border, and they did not ask us about the issue either,” he said.

Head of the Interior Ministry’s General Department of Immigratio­n, Sok Phal, also said he had not heard of the case. “I don’t know about this informatio­n,” he said. “Ask the Thai authoritie­s.”

Interior Ministry spokesman Khieu Sopheak could not be reached.

On August 27, Chhay Buna, head of border checkpoint­s, maintained Yingluck’s crossing into Cambodia was merely a “rumour”, and added that “If Yingluck crossed the border, [she] may have been seen by other people around, but no one [saw her].”

Other Interior Ministry officials said at the time that they had no informatio­n of her entering the country, or attempting to fly to Dubai via Singapore.

The Thai junta and officials from Yingluck’s Pheu Thai party have given conflictin­g accounts of the escape route. One senior military official said they believed Yingluck flew straight to Singapore in a private jet and then on to Dubai. Party insiders have said she either drove or took a boat to Cambodia, then flew in a private plane to Singapore and on to Dubai.

Analysts say the military leadership were concerned that jailing Yingluck would afford her martyr status and might reinvigora­te her supporters.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia