BSS
  30 Apr 2025, 16:51

Thai court rejects ex-premier Thaksin special treatment case

BANGKOK, April 30, 2025 (BSS/AFP) - Thailand's top court dismissed a case on 
Wednesday that accused former premier Thaksin Shinawatra of receiving special 
treatment when he returned to the kingdom after more than a decade in exile.

The case filed by a former lawmaker from the Democrat Party -- longtime foes 
of Thaksin -- alleged the authorities gave the 75-year-old former leader 
preferential treatment when he came back to Thailand in August 2023.

Thaksin was sentenced to eight years in prison for corruption and abuse of 
power as soon as he landed in Bangkok and was taken to a detention centre.

However, he was transferred to a private room at the Police General Hospital 
the next day for health reasons and remained there until pardoned by King 
Maha Vajiralongkorn around six months later and was released on parole.

That Thaksin did not spend time in a prison cell, combined with the fact he 
returned on the very day his Pheu Thai party took over the government, 
fuelled speculation that he had benefited from some kind of backroom deal.

The Supreme Court dismissed the case on Wednesday, ruling the petitioner 
"does not have the rights to file a petition" because he was not directly 
involved.

However, the court ordered its own investigation to determine whether Thaksin 
had served his sentence properly, summoning officials from the prison, the 
Department of Corrections and a hospital doctor to testify on June 13.

Thaksin, who had said he would retire from politics after returning, has 
remained active campaigning in provincial elections for Pheu Thai and 
recently volunteering in informal trade discussions with the United States, 
according to Thai media.

Pheu Thai formed a coalition with military-aligned parties, ending decades of 
political wrangling between progressive and pro-military factions. Thaksin's 
daughter Paetongtarn Shinawatra became prime minister last year.

Political analyst Yuttaporn Issarachai told AFP the case was "just another 
legal battle" launched by anti-Thaksin groups to push him out of politics.

"It's something we have seen repeatedly in Thai politics over the past 20 
years," he said.

While Thaksin remains popular with his support base, he has long been 
disliked by Thailand's pro-royalist and military establishment.

He is due to appear in court in July over a separate royal defamation case 
linked to his 2015 interview with a South Korean media outlet.