Two years after coup, Thaksin on trial for graft
THAILAND: Thailand put billionaire former premier Thaksin Shinawatra
on trial for corruption on Tuesday, almost two years after he was
toppled from power in a military coup.
Thaksin and his wife Pojaman, loved by the poor and loathed by the
Bangkok elite, were not on hand at the Supreme Court for the opening of
a legal saga that could put them behind bars for 13 years.
The case is only one of many being launched against Thaksin and his
allies, and threatens to bog down a new government - led by Thaksin
loyalists - which is already facing mass protests in the streets.
The Supreme Court is considering whether Thaksin, a self-made tycoon
who now owns English football side Manchester City, illegally arranged
for his wife to buy a prime chunk of Bangkok real estate for just
one-third its appraised value.
"We are confident that our evidence will be enough to prove in the
court that Thaksin and his wife are not guilty," their lawyer Anek
Khamchum told AFP.
Thaksin was ousted from power by royalist generals in the military,
who accused him of widespread corruption, undermining the nation's
democracy and insulting Thailand's revered king.
Bangkok, Tuesday, AFP |