The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Thai minister says has no plan to revoke passports of Yingluck

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BANGKOK: Thailand has no immediate plan to revoke the passports of former prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra, the foreign minister said yesterday, after she fled the country last week ahead of a court verdict in a negligence case.

Yingluck, 50, was elected Thailand’s first female prime minister in 2011 and is the sister of ousted former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra.

She skipped Friday’s hearing, stunning thousands of supporters gathered at the Supreme Court, with senior party members having said she fled to Dubai. The government has not confirmed where she is.

Yingluck holds two Thai passports, one regular and another diplomatic, and is also thought to hold a third, foreign one.

“The issue has not reached the foreign ministry yet,” foreign minister Don Pramudwina­i told reporters when asked if the ministry would revoke her passports.

“This foreign minister is not yet handling this.”

A foreign ministry spokesman said he could not confirm whether Yingluck held a foreign passport.

Her brother Thaksin holds a Montenegri­n passport. He was ousted in a 2006 coup and fled Thailand to avoid a 2008 jail term for graft related to a land case he called politicall­y motivated.

He has a home in Dubai but travels frequently, particular­ly to Singapore and Hong Kong, to meet his three children and grandchild­ren, members of the Shinawatra family have said in social media posts.

Yingluck was forced to step down days before a May 2014 coup, after a court found her guilty of abuse of power.

She faces up to 10 years in prison if found guilty of mismanagin­g a rice subsidy scheme that was a flagship policy of her administra­tion. — Reuters

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