
Thailand’s Supreme Court is set to deliver a key verdict on Tuesday on whether former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra must serve prison time he previously avoided while being held in hospital detention — a ruling that could finally land the influential tycoon behind bars.
On return from 15 years of self-imposed exile in 2023, he spent only a few hours in prison before being transferred to hospital complaining of heart trouble and chest pains, prompting widespread scepticism and public outrage.
His eight-year sentence for conflicts of interest and abuse of power was commuted to one year by the king and Thaksin was released on parole after just six months, the entirety of which he had spent in the VIP wing of a hospital.
Political Turmoil
Power-broker Thaksin is experiencing a period of political reckoning after his daughter and protégé Paetongtarn Shinawatra was sacked as prime minister by a court 11 days ago – the sixth premier from or backed by the Shinawatra family to be removed by the judiciary or military.
Days of chaos ensued before Paetongtarn’s government fell on Friday, outmanoeuvred by challenger Anutin Charnvirakul, who was elected premier by parliament in a humiliating defeat for Thaksin’s once unstoppable Pheu Thai party.
Highly Anticipated Ruling
Wearing a suit and yellow tie, the colour associated with Thailand’s monarchy, Thaksin arrived at the court with his family and greeted hundreds of media workers outside, with about a dozen of his red-shirted supporters nearby carrying his picture and hand-written placards.
The court will decide whether the hospital stay was lawful and if it should count as time served – and could order the polarising billionaire to complete the sentence in prison.
It sequestered his medical records and summoned 20 witnesses, including a former head of the corrections department and physicians who treated him.
Thailand’s medical council has suspended two doctors for issuing documents that contained false medical information. A prison doctor was cautioned for failing to meet medical standards in referring Thaksin for hospital treatment.
The 76-year-old appeared in good health as he returned from exile to cheering crowds in 2023 and in the months following his release, when he became active again in politics, though officially retired.
His lawyer in June insisted he had been sick during his hospital stay, adding “he has completely served his sentence”.
Amid turmoil in his party, Thaksin quietly flew on Thursday to Dubai, where he had spent most of his exile, prompting speculation that he had fled justice again. But he returned on Monday, having promised to attend the verdict.
(With inputs from Reuters)