Exile Thaksin convicted of corruption
Former Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra was today found guilty of corruption and sentenced to two years jail by the country's Supreme Court.
But he is unlikely ever to serve the sentence. Billionaire Thaksin, the former owner of Manchester City football club, and his wife Pojaman jumped bail and fled to Britain earlier this year.
Thaksin was found guilty of aiding his wife to purchase a plot of land at a government auction when he was still in office.
Pojaman, who was found guilty of tax evasion in August and sentenced to three years, was a co-defendant in the latest case but was cleared in a 7-2 ruling by the nine judges of the Supreme Court for Political Office Holders.
The same court ruled 5-4 against Thaksin.
"The attorney general will be seeking Thaksin's extradition very shortly," Saeksan Bangsomboom, the head of the prosecution team said.
Thaksin has the right to appeal the verdict.
The sentence would expire in 10 years, after which Thaksin could return to Thailand without fear of being jailed, Saeksan said.
Thaksin was toppled in a bloodless military coup in September 2006 on accusations of mass corruption, dividing the nation and undermining the institutions of democracy and the monarchy.
Although he faces several court cases, the land case was the first in which he has been found guilty and sentenced.
Thaksin, a former telecommunications tycoon who was prime minister from 2001 to 2006, remains a divisive figure in Thai society.
Thaksin introduced populist policies to Thailand's long tradition of money politics, winning himself a strong following among the country's rural and urban poor, many of whom continue to see him as their champion.
Despite living in exile, Thaksin is known to be the prime mover behind the People Power Party (PPP), which leads the current government and came to power in December general elections on an unabashedly pro-Thaksin platform.
The possibility of a Thaksin political comeback has prompted the People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD), an alliance of anti-government groups, to hold protests in Bangkok since May, culminating with its seizure in August of Government House, the seat of the executive branch of the government.
Despite the protestors' increasingly illegal behaviour, the government has been powerless to end the PAD demonstrations, which have the backing of powerful figures within the Bangkok political elite.
A government crackdown on the PAD on October 7, which left two PAD followers dead and more than 400 injured, prompted the commander-in-chief of Thailand's army, General Anupong Pasojinda, to call for the resignation of Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat as a show of responsibility for the violence.
Somchai, Thaksin's brother-in-law, has so far turned down the general's suggestion.
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