The Phnom Penh Post

Yingluck rumours denied

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cited anonymous sources saying Yingluck got help securing a Cambodian passport in order to travel to Singapore in a private jet and later fly to Dubai, where her older brother,Thaksin Shinawatra, ousted as prime minister in 2006, is now believed to be living in self-imposed exile.

However, Cambodian officials denied the claims of Yingluck making her escape through Cambodia.

Chhay Buna, who is in charge of border checkpoint­s, claimed it was just a “rumour, and not true”.

“IfYingluck crossed the border, [she] may have been seen by other people around, but no one [saw her],” he said, calling the media “unprofessi­onal” for not asking Cambodian officials to confirm the informatio­n.

“[They] only put their own analysis,” he added.

Meanwhile, Sok Sophorn, deputy chief of the Passport Department, maintained his department only issues passports for Cambodian citizens. “Ms Yingluck [is] Thai, she is not Cambodian, so I don’t issue a passport to the foreigners.”

Sophorn said he would only investigat­e the claim that Yingluck received help obtaining a Cambodian passport if he was assigned to look into the issue by his superiors.

A spokesman for the Ministry of Interior’s Immigratio­n Department, Lieutenant General Kerm Sarin, maintained there was no report in the system of Yingluck having departed to Singapore from Cambodia, or of her being issued a Cambodian passport.

“For the time being, we don’t have any report. There is no record,” he said. “We don’t have any record that Yingluck left from Cambodia to Singapore.”

Sarin added officials with his department were not in communicat­ion with Thai authoritie­s as of yesterday.

Khek Norinda, spokesman for Cambodia Airports, only claimed officials had “no informatio­n about this case”, without answering specific questions. Interior Ministry spokesman Khieu Sopheak couldn’t be reached.

If Yingluck is found guilty, she could face a maximum of 10 years in prison and a lifetime ban from politics.

Hun Sen is reputed to have close ties to Yingluck’s brother Thaksin, whom the premier in 2009 referred to as his “eternal friend”, offering a residence in Cambodia three years after Thaksin was convicted on corruption charges. That same year, the Cambodian government said it would not extradite Thaksin, with Hun Sen telling reporters that Thaksin could serve as his “economic adviser”.

Yingluck’s family has other ties to Cambodian politician­s too. In 2013, the daughter of Yaowapa Wongsawat, another of Thaksin’s younger sisters, married the son of Cambodian lawmaker Seang Nam. Nam couldn’t be reached for comment yesterday.

If it were true thatYinglu­ck fled through Cambodia, she wouldn’t be the first one to have escaped to the Kingdom. Jakrapob Penkair, a former minister and adviser to Thaksin who helped to found the country’s “Red Shirt” movement, fled to Cambodia a few years ago. He didn’t respond to a request for comment yesterday, but is still believed to be in exile in Cambodia.

 ?? FACEBOOK ?? Former Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra gives out alms in a merit-making ceremony at her residence in Bangkok in a photo posted on Wednesday.
FACEBOOK Former Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra gives out alms in a merit-making ceremony at her residence in Bangkok in a photo posted on Wednesday.

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