Thailand’s Thaksin indicted for insulting monarchy

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Thai prosecutors on Tuesday formally indicted influential former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra under the kingdom’s strict royal insult laws over comments he made nearly a decade ago.

The case against the 74-year-old billionaire, twice elected premier and ousted in a 2006 military putsch, is one of four before the courts that could unleash fresh political instability in the coup-prone kingdom.

Thaksin, the patriarch of the Pheu Thai party that leads the coalition government, appeared at Bangkok’s Ratchada Criminal Court accused of lese-majeste over an interview he gave to South Korean media in 2015.

“Today a state prosecutor indicted Thaksin Shinawatra and the court accepted the case,” the attorney general’s office said in a statement.

The former Manchester City owner was granted bail on a 500,000 baht ($13,500) bond and ordered not to leave the country without permission, court officials said.

Thailand has some of the world’s strictest royal defamation laws protecting King Maha Vajiralongkorn and his close family, with each charge bringing a potential 15-year prison sentence.

Critics say the laws are misused to stifle legitimate political debate, and there has been a spike in their use since youth-led anti-government street protests in 2020 and 2021.

Thaksin is the biggest name among the more than 270 people charged under the laws since the protests, according to Thai Lawyers for Human Rights, a legal group that handles many cases.

Thaksin’s case comes on the same day the Constitutional Court continues deliberating on three other cases that could spark a political crisis.

One seeks the ouster of Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin under ethics rules, over the appointment of a cabinet minister with a criminal conviction.

In another, the election commission is seeking the dissolution of the main opposition Move Forward Party (MFP), which won most seats at last year’s general election but was blocked from forming the government.

The court is not expected to give a judgement in those cases on Tuesday, but is due to rule in a third case on whether the ongoing election for a new senate is lawful.

If the court decides to halt or even cancel the election, the current senators — appointed by the last junta — would continue in their role for the time being.

– Buffer or hostage? –

For two decades, Thai politics has been dominated by a struggle between the conservative military pro-royalist elite and progressive parties — first those of Thaksin and his allies and now the MFP.

Thaksin returned to Thailand last August from 15 years in self-exile on the same day Srettha took power in an alliance with pro-military parties previously bitterly opposed to Thaksin and his followers.

The timing seemed to suggest a truce in the long-running tussle as both sides sought to see off the threat posed by MFP.

But the Constitutional Court cases could rip any such deal apart, and Thaksin has hinted that he believes the lese-majeste allegations are an establishment ruse to undermine him and Srettha’s government.

“I think the latest developments signal that he is still somewhere between a political mastermind and a hostage,” political analyst Napon Jatusripitak of the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore told AFP.

“He still finds being used as a buffer by the establishment against popular pro-democracy movements coming from below.”

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