Ex-Thai PM banned from politics
Thai authorities have banned former Prime Minister Yingluck
Shinawatra from office for five years and launched a legal case that
could see her jailed.
An army-appointed legislature impeached her over corruption in a
scheme she oversaw to subsidise rice farmers.The criminal charges, which
also relate to the rice scheme, could result in a 10-year jail term.The
military has ruled Thailand since May 2014, when they overthrew Ms
Yingluck's government in a coup.
The BBC's Jonathan Head in Bangkok says the impeachment sends a
strong signal that there will be no compromise and her family will be
removed from politics.
Ms Yingluck and her brother, tycoon and former Prime Minister Thaksin
Shinawatra, remain hugely popular among Thailand's rural poor, but are
hated by an urban and middle-class elite who accuse them of corruption
and abuse of power.
Their party is the most popular in Thailand and has - under various
different names - won every election since 2001.Shortly after her
impeachment, Ms Yingluck was due to hold a news conference at a Bangkok
hotel.But troops arrived and prevented her from speaking.Thailand is
still under martial law and unauthorised political meetings are banned.
Ms Yingluck has since posted a statement (in Thai) on her Facebook
page accusing the authorities of trying to destroy her."Democracy has
died in Thailand today, along with the rule of law," she said.
As they prepared for this vote, those advocating impeachment argued
that it had nothing to do with politics or reconciliation, that it
should be understood purely as a response to corruption in the Yingluck
government's rice support scheme.
That there was corruption is undeniable; there is plenty of evidence.
The generous subsidy was also financially unsustainable.But no-one has
yet been tried or convicted.
Nor were Ms Yingluck's opponents able to explain how impeachment was
possible against a politician who has already been removed from office,
and by an assembly entirely appointed by the military.
So this was not about corruption, or the rule of law. It was the
culmination of eight months of lobbying by hard-line opponents of the
Shinawatra family, who want them purged from politics, and eight months
of hesitation by military rulers who had some hopes of being seen as
saviours, delivering the nation from political turmoil.
That calculation has now changed decisively. With a five-year ban
from politics and a criminal charge hanging over her, Ms Yingluck faces
the same fate as her brother - jail or exile.Her party and supporters,
who have relied on her family's funds, must decide whether they will
seek new leadership or start resisting the military.
The allegations against Ms Yingluck centre on a scheme in which her
Pheu Thai-led government bought rice from Thai farmers at a much higher
price than on the global market.It resulted in the accumulation of huge
stockpiles of rice and hit Thailand's rice exports hard.
Anti-corruption investigators have accused Ms Yingluck and her party
of using the scheme to buy votes from farmers, particularly from their
power base in the north, and allowing government associates to profit
from it.
On Friday, 190 out of 219 lawmakers present in the National
Legislative Assembly voted to impeach her. Eighteen voted against
impeachment while the others abstained. One lawmaker was absent for the
vote.
The votes were written on a whiteboard as they were tallied, and
broadcast on national television.
Ms Yingluck has maintained that she was not involved in the scheme's
day-to-day operations, and has defended it as an attempt to support the
rural poor.
24 Jan BBC
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