Jailed former Thai leader Thaksin granted parole, PM says

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Former Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra was on a list of prisoners who were considered elderly or ill and approved for parole.

Former Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra was on a list of prisoners who were considered elderly or ill and approved for parole.

PHOTO: AFP

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- Thailand’s controversial billionaire former premier Thaksin Shinawatra has been granted parole after serving six months in detention, Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin said on Feb 13, while highlighting his service to the country.

The influential Thaksin, a political heavyweight and arguably Thailand’s best known prime minister,

made a dramatic homecoming

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,” Mr Srettha, 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 telecommunications 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, media reports say.

He could be freed after Feb 18, according to prison rules.

Thaksin’s lawyer Winyat Chatmontri said he has yet to receive a release date.

Thaksin’s daughter Paetongtarn Shinawatra told reporters 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 getting parole, the former leader could still be detained as

public prosecutors consider charging him

over insulting the monarchy during a 2015 interview.

His return coincided with ally and political newcomer Mr

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 Shinawatra-backed 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

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