Former Thai PM Thaksin eligible for parole in February, says corrections official

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FILE PHOTO: Former Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who is expected to be arrested upon his return as he ends almost two decades of self-imposed exile, waves at Don Mueang airport in Bangkok, Thailand August 22, 2023. REUTERS/Athit Perawongmetha/File Photo

Former Thai PM Thaksin Shinawatra is currently being treated at a police hospital.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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Thailand’s former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra could be released on parole as early as late February, having already had an eight-year prison sentence commuted to one year following his return from self-exile, a senior corrections official said on Monday.

Thailand’s most famous politician

made a dramatic homecoming in August,

15 years after he entered self-exile, having been ousted by a military coup in 2006.

While abroad, he was found guilty in absentia in three cases involving abuse of power, conflict of interest and malfeasance.

Thaksin’s return to Thailand coincided with the

emergence of his ally Srettha Thavisin as the country’s new prime minister,

following months of uncertainty in the wake of an election in May that resulted in defeat for the ruling pro-military party.

Parties aligned with Thaksin have won every election since 2001 up until the 2023 vote, when Pheu Thai, the party backed by his family, came second.

The telecommunications billionaire, whose brash personality and populist policies appealed to poorer Thais, had clashed with the country’s old money elites and royalist military, which also ousted his sister’s government in 2014.

There was speculation that Thaksin had reached some deal with his old foes, after the pro-military parties gave the Pheu Thai candidate, Mr Srettha, their backing to form a new government.

Thaksin and Mr Srettha deny this.

On his first night in Thailand, Thaksin

was transferred from prison to a police hospital,

where he is being treated for chest pains and high blood pressure.

Days later, King Maha Vajiralongkorn

commuted his eight-year sentence to one year,

but Thaksin could be released sooner.

“After serving six months of his sentence, Thaksin will be eligible for parole for prisoners older than 70 or those who are ill,” Corrections Department deputy director-general Sitthi Sutivong told Reuters.

The corrections department makes an assessment for each case, and there is no petition process for parole in these cases, he said.

The former prime minister’s treatment in hospital is at the discretion of medical professionals and does not have a time limit, he added. REUTERS

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