International News

Thai junta says police helped Yingluck escape

BANGKOK, Sept 23, (APP/AFP) – Thailand’s deputy junta
leader has accused three police officers of helping sneak ex-prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra out of the country last month, a vanishing act that stunned the kingdom.
Yingluck, whose government was toppled by the military in 2014, has not been seen since August 25, when she failed to turn up for a court verdict in her criminal negligence trial.
Thailand’s junta says it was unaware she was planning to escape —
something many Thais have found difficult to believe given the round-the-clock surveillance Yingluck frequently complained of.
Analysts say the former premier, who faced up to a decade in jail, most likely cut a secret deal with the junta to exit the country.
But the military has denied the charge and is now pointing the finger at the police.
Authorities interrogated three police officers this week after seizing a car that was allegedly used to drive Yingluck to the border with Cambodia, from where she is believed to have flown to a third country.
“They said they received the order (to help her escape),” Prawit Wongsuwon, the junta’s number two, said of the police officers on Friday.

BANGKOK, Sept 23, (APP/AFP) – Thailand’s deputy junta
leader has accused three police officers of helping sneak ex-prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra out of the country last month, a vanishing act that stunned the kingdom.
Yingluck, whose government was toppled by the military in 2014, has not been seen since August 25, when she failed to turn up for a court verdict in her criminal negligence trial.
Thailand’s junta says it was unaware she was planning to escape —
something many Thais have found difficult to believe given the round-the-clock surveillance Yingluck frequently complained of.
Analysts say the former premier, who faced up to a decade in jail, most likely cut a secret deal with the junta to exit the country.
But the military has denied the charge and is now pointing the finger at the police.
Authorities interrogated three police officers this week after seizing a car that was allegedly used to drive Yingluck to the border with Cambodia, from where she is believed to have flown to a third country.
“They said they received the order (to help her escape),” Prawit Wongsuwon, the junta’s number two, said of the police officers on Friday.