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Thailand's former PM facing impeachment

Ms Yingluck was removed from office in May, after a court found her guilty of abuse of power

Amy Lefevre
Friday 28 November 2014 14:07 EST
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Thailand’s military-appointed legislature started impeachment proceedings against ousted former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra yesterday over a loss-making rice subsidy programme, seen as a further step to try to end the political influence of her powerful family.

Ms Yingluck was removed from office in May, after a court found her guilty of abuse of power, days before the army staged a coup after months of sometimes violent street demonstrations in Bangkok aimed at ousting her government.

A day after she was removed, Thailand’s National Anti-Corruption Commission found her guilty of mishandling the rice scheme. Friday’s decision sees the ruling junta, formally known as the National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO), edging a step closer to rooting out the influence of Yingluck and her brother, former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra.

Thailand has been convulsed by bouts of political turbulence ever since Mr Thaksin was removed in a previous putsch in 2006. The kingdom is bitterly divided between his supporters and detractors. Ambika Ahuja, a Southeast Asia specialist at Eurasia Group, a New York-based political consultancy, said the military was using the threat of impeachment as a “bargaining chip”. “Given the potential backlash from Thaksin’s grassroots supporters, the army will proceed cautiously,” said Ms Ahuja. “The military is going to want to use the possibility of impeachment as a bargaining chip rather than an immediate end game.”

In Thailand, officials can be impeached even after leaving office. Ms Yingluck faces a five-year ban from office if impeached. The rice scheme, which paid farmers up to 50 per cent above market rates for their crop, helped bring Ms Yingluck to power in a landslide election in 2011 due to support from farmers mostly in the north and northeast of the country.

However, the scheme became financially unsustainable, leaving hundreds of thousands of farmers unpaid and an estimated 19.2 million tons of unsold rice in state warehouses. Ms Yingluck denies any wrongdoing.

The hearing will take 45 days before a vote on whether to impeach Ms Yingluck. The junta has reshuffled the civil service and purged some senior officers in the police force, once seen as an institution loyal to Mr Thaksin, to try to neutralise his allies. Ms Yingluck faces separate, criminal charges brought against her by the NACC, over the rice scheme. If found guilty, she faces up to 10 years in jail. But public prosecutors said there was not enough evidence and set up a committee to further investigate the case.

Reuters

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