The Manila Times

Yingluck pulls vanishing act on crunch court date

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BANGKOK: Thailand’s ex-prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra missed a court appearance in a negligence trial on Friday that could have seen her jailed, prompting the Supreme Court to issue an arrest warrant amid snowballin­g speculatio­n that

Thousands of supporters—outnumbere­d by security forces— waited from dawn for a glimpse minister, but she did not show, with a senior party source telling Agence France-Presse she is “likely in Singapore.”

- gluck will have joined her billionair­e brother Thaksin in self-exile— a knock-out blow to the family and their political ambitions.

Thailand is deeply divided between the Shinawatra­s and their political base, which is mainly drawn from the rural poor; and a royalist army-aligned elite, who loathe the clan and refuse to cede power to democratic government­s.

Yingluck’s government was removed by a military coup in 2014.

In a day of high drama, Yingluck ducked her court hearing for neg policy, which carried up to 10 years in prison and a life ban from politics.

“Her lawyer said she is sick and asked to delay the ruling... the court does not believe she is sick... and has decided to issue an arrest country, lead judge Cheep Chulamon told the court, rescheduli­ng the verdict to September 27.

A minister in her government was jailed hours later for 42 years in a separate trial for corruption linked to the policy.

Thai junta chief Prayut ChanO-Cha denied knowledge of her whereabout­s but ordered border checkpoint­s “to be stepped up,” while his number- two Prawit Wongsuwon said it was “possible” - boring Cambodia.

A senior source in the Shinawatra­s Pheu Thai party told Agence FrancePres­se that “as of now she is likely in Singapore... it’s impossible she left without the military greenlight.”

Family tradition

Yingluck’s brother, Thaksin Shi Thailand in 2008 before he was convicted of graft and handed a two year jail term.

The telecoms tycoon who once owned Manchester City football club, has not returned since and his Thai passport has been revoked.

He is believed to use a Montenegri­n passport to travel between homes in Dubai, London, Hong Kong and Singapore.

The clan had clung on in Thailand’s treacherou­s political game for more than a decade despite two coups, deadly protests, a cascade of legal cases and huge asset seizures.

Thaksin remains a galvanizin­g force for his party and a canny political operator.

But analysts say if both siblings are now in exile their time in Thailand’s spin dryer political arena is over.

“It is the end of the Shinawatra­s and the Pheu Thai party in politics,” Puangthong Pawakpan, a Thai politics expert at Bangkok’s Chulalongk­orn University.

“With two family members as fugitives, the family loses political legitimacy,” she said, adding that Yingluck’s departure would be welcomed by a Thai junta weary of the prospect of her political martyrdom in jail.

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