Legal expert says Yingluck can’t avoid prosecution

Mississanu Krea-ngam claims that former prime minister Yingluck may follow the same rules as her nephew Thaksin.

Former prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra, 57, spends most of her time in London, where the picture above was taken in December last year.
Former prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra, 57, spends most of her time in London, where the image above was taken in December last month.

Previous deputy prime minister Wissanu Krea-ngam said on Tuesday that former prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra, who fled the nation seven years ago, you return home as long as she is willing to face legal charges.

The legitimate expert, who has advised several institutions, was responding to questions from the internet regarding the likelihood that Yingluck might re-join her older brother’s feet sometime in the coming weeks.

After 15 years in exile worldwide, former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra returned to Thailand on August 22, 2013, after going through the legal system, and was released on parole in February of this year.

Debate is mounting that Yingluck’s gain is now on the ocean. A fresh Department of Corrections rule pertaining to out-of-prison confinement appears to have been specifically designed for the fugitive former top, for starters. The Ministry of Justice has dismissed that state, yet.

In an interview with Thaksin next fortnight, Nikkei Asia claimed that his sister should be able to travel to the Songkran festival in April.

He claimed that he saw no barriers to her returning.

Yingluck fled the nation in 2017, just before the Supreme Court handed her a five-year sentence for failing to stop the country’s biggest bone circumstances, which was worth hundreds of billions of ringgit.

According to Mr. Wissanu, Yingluck will have to adhere to the same rules as Thaksin did when he returned next month. He initially reported to the judge, therefore entered prison, and successfully applied for a royal pardon.

Thaksin previously spent a day behind bars, however. Within a few hours of being released on parole, he was taken to Police General Hospital, where he spent six months. He paid all the expenses of his remain, including the area that price 8, 500 ringgit a night, a parliamentary investigation was told lately.

Mr. Wissanu claimed to have personally witnessed Thaksin being detained the evening he arrived. The incarceration room also qualifies as a jail, he said, despite no resembleing a normal mobile with metal bars.

Had Thaksin never developed illness, he claimed, he would have been held there until his word had been served.

Corrections officials have declined to provide more information about Thaksin’s condition or the therapies he received at the police doctor. The 75-year-old has appeared to be in solid fine health since his release.

Mr Wissanu said he had never heard of Yingluck, who is 57 and spends most of her time in London, suffering any major health problems.

” If she comes back and is ready to go to prison, there shouldn’t be any trouble. And she will probably have to petition for a royal reprimand, which is something I don’t get giving an view on”, he said.