Arab News

Thai ex-PM Yingluck in Dubai, may seek asylum in UK — junta source

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BANGKOK: Fugitive former Thai premier Yingluck Shinawatra fled to Dubai and may try to seek asylum in the UK, a junta source told AFP Saturday, after she ducked a legal ruling, wrong-footing the court and her supporters alike.

Yingluck, 50, was due on Friday morning to arrive at the Supreme Court for the ruling in her trial for criminal negligence that could have seen her jailed for 10 years.

But she did not show up, staging a vanishing act that wrote a dramatic closing chapter to the 16-year political saga of her mega-rich Shinawatra family.

Speculatio­n swirled on Saturday on the whereabout­s of Thailand’s first female prime minister — and her possible escape route.

The junta source, who is well-placed in the security hierarchy, gave a detailed descriptio­n of her escape, saying she took a private jet from Thailand to Singapore and onto Dubai, the base of Shinawatra family patriarch Thaksin, who is Yingluck’s older brother.

“Thaksin has long prepared escape plan for his sister... he would not allow his sister to spend even a single day in prison,” the source added, requesting anonymity.

“But Dubai is not Yingluck’s final destinatio­n,” the source said, adding she may be aiming “to claim asylum in Britain.”

Thaksin, who once owned Manchester City football club, owns property in London and spends significan­t amounts of time in the city.

The Shinawatra’s political network remained tight-lipped on Saturday in a media blackout that only served to heighten speculatio­n over her dash from Thailand and the likelihood of a possible deal with the junta to allow her to leave.

A senior source inside the family’s Pheu Thai party, also requesting anonymity, on Saturday told AFP Yingluck had fled the country for Dubai a few days before the ruling.

The Shinawatra political dynasty emerged in 2001 with a series of groundbrea­king welfare schemes that won them votes and the loyalty of the rural poor.

But their popularity rattled Thailand’s royalist, army-aligned elite, who battered successive government­s linked to the clan with coups, court cases and protests.

Yingluck’s government was toppled by a coup in 2014 and she was put on trial over negligence linked to a costly rice subsidy that propped up her rural political base.

Thaksin, Yingluck’s elder brother, has been based partly in Dubai since he fled Thailand in 2008 to avoid jail for a corruption conviction. He was toppled from power by a 2006 coup.

Thai newspapers reported that Yingluck fled through a land border to Cambodia, flew to Singapore and on to Dubai, perhaps two days before her court date.

It was a curveball that appeared to surprise even her family — an elder brother and sister waited at the court for her arrival alongside thousands of supporters.

Shinawatra loyalists expressed sympathy with her shock move, saying the ruling would have been predetermi­ned as her case was politicall­y motivated.

“If she has fled abroad it is because this set of judges are appointed by the military and do not come from a democratic system,” Surachet Chaikosol, 59, a “Red Shirt” activist told AFP.

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