Business Day

Former Thailand premier Thaksin to be released on parole

- Panarat Thepgumpan­at and Chayut Setboonsar­ng

Thailand ’ s controvers­ial billionair­e former premier Thaksin Shinawatra has been granted parole after serving six months in detention, the prime minister said on Tuesday.

The influentia­l Thaksin, a political heavyweigh­t and arguably Thailand’s bestknown prime minister, made a dramatic homecoming in 2023 after living abroad for 15 years in self-exile to avoid prison for a conflict of interest.

Thaksin, 74, soon after had his eight-year jail term commuted to a year by the king. He has served six months of that in hospital detention over an undisclose­d health condition and did not spend a single night in prison.

“It’s official that he received parole. It’s in line with the correction­s department regulation­s,” Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin, a fellow tycoon and ally of the Shinawatra family, told reporters.

“Thaksin was prime minister for many years and did many good things for the country for a long time. After he comes out, he would be a normal citizen.”

A former policeman and telecom magnate who has been at the centre of a tumultuous two-decade battle for power in Thailand, Thaksin was on a list of 930 prisoners who were considered elderly or ill and approved for parole, according to media reports.

He could be released after February 18, according to correction­s’ Thaksin s lawyer department Winyat Chatmontri rules.

said he has yet to receive a release date. Thaksin’s daughter Paetongtar­n Shinawatra told reporters that it was time her father came home. “I hope you’re strong and healthy … come out and live your life in Thailand,” she added.

Despite being granted parole, the former leader could still be detained as public prosecutor­s consider charging him for insulting the monarchy during a 2015 interview.

Thaksin’s return last year coincided with ally and political newcomer Srettha being chosen as prime minister on the same day, adding to speculatio­n that both developmen­ts were part of a behind-the-scenes deal between Thaksin and his powerful enemies in Thailand’s royalist-military establishm­ent.

Thaksin’s allies and the government, led by the Shinawatra­backed Pheu Thai Party, have dismissed that.

On his first night in prison, Thaksin was moved to a police hospital, with doctors saying he had experience­d tightness in his chest and high blood pressure.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Bed rest: Thaksin Shinawatra had his eightyear prison sentence cut to a year and he has served six months in hospital.
/Reuters Bed rest: Thaksin Shinawatra had his eightyear prison sentence cut to a year and he has served six months in hospital.

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