Biodun Iginla, BBC News

Biodun Iginla, BBC News

Thursday, August 24, 2017

Yingluck trial: Thai ex-PM fails to show for verdict



  • AugustFrom the section
    August 25, 2017   04H:29  GMT/UTC/ZULU TIME Asia
Supporters of ousted former Thai prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra wait for her at the Supreme Court in Bangkok, Thailand, 25 August 2017.Image copyrightREUTERS
Image captionHundreds of Ms Yingluck's supporters turned up early on Friday outside Bangkok's Supreme Court
by Xian Wan and Biodun Iginla, BBC News, Bangkok
Former Thai prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra has failed to show up for the verdict in her trial over a controversial rice subsidy scheme.
The supreme court has delayed the verdict to 27 September and has issued an arrest warrant.
Ms Yingluck, who is on trial for negligence, has denied wrongdoing in the scheme which cost billions of dollars.
If eventually found guilty, she faces jail and a lifetime ban from politics.
Ms Yingluck, who became Thailand's first female prime minister in 2011, was impeached in 2015 over the rice scheme.
The case was brought by the military-backed government which removed her from office.
But she remains popular. Hundreds of her supporters turned up outside the Supreme Court in Bangkok ahead of the verdict, amid a heavy police presence.
Ms Yingluck's rice subsidy scheme, which was part of her election campaign platform, launched in 2011 shortly after she took office.
Image copyrightEPA
Image captionThe rice scheme was one of several controversies which overshadowed Ms Yingluck's time in office
It was aimed at boosting farmers' incomes and alleviating rural poverty, and saw the government paying farmers nearly twice the market rate for their crop.
But it hit Thailand's rice exports hard, leading to a loss of at least $8bn (£6.25bn) and huge stockpiles of rice which the government could not sell.
Though popular with her rural voter base, opponents said the scheme was too expensive and open to corruption.
During her trial, Ms Yingluck had argued she was not responsible for the day-to-day running of the scheme. She has insisted she is a victim of political persecution.

Timeline of Yingluck's rice scheme controversy

May 2011- Yingluck Shinawatra is elected PM, and shortly afterwards begins rolling out her rice subsidy scheme.
January 2014 - Thailand's anti-corruption authorities investigate Ms Yingluck in connection to the scheme.
May 2014 - She is forced to step down from her post after Thailand's constitutional court finds her guilty of abuse of power in another case. Weeks later the military ousts what remains of her government.
January 2015 - An army-backed legislature impeaches Ms Yingluck for corruption over her role in the rice scheme, which effectively bans her from politics for five years. It also launches legal proceedings against her.
August 2017 - Ms Yingluck fails to appear at court for the verdict, claiming ill health.

Ms Yingluck's time in office was overshadowed by controversy as well as strong political opposition.
The youngest sister of tycoon and former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, Ms Yingluck was seen by her opponents as a proxy for her brother, who was controversially ousted by the military in 2006.
Both siblings remain popular among the rural poor, but are hated by an urban and middle-class elite.
Their Pheu Thai party has - under various different names - won every election since 2001.

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