Thai court to rule Wednesday on PM dismissal case

Thailand's Constitutional Court will rule on May 7 on whether to dismiss Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra from office in an abuse of power case.

Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra

Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra (AAP)

Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra of Thailand will find out her fate on Wednesday on an abuse of power case.

Thailand's Constitutional Court said Tuesday that the decision will be ruled on May 7 as to whether to dismiss Yingluck from office.

"The hearing is over... the court has decided to rule on May 7 at noon," court president Charoon Intachan said.

Yingluck attended the case as ordered by the court along with three others who are due to give testimony, including Thawil.

"I would like to deny all allegations I am accused of," Yingluck said, seated beside her legal team. "As the prime minister, I am entitled to carry out responsibilities I have toward the people … and for the utmost benefit of the general public."

The case, one of two potential knockout legal moves against her premiership, comes as Thailand's political crisis reaches a critical juncture with anti-government protesters still massed on Bangkok's streets -- although in diminished numbers -- and Yingluck's supporters also threatening to rally to defend her.

The complaint was filed to the court by a group of senators who said that the replacement of then-national security chief Thawil Pliensri after Yingluck was elected in 2011 was for the benefit of her party.
   
Under the constitution -- forged after a 2006 coup that ousted Yingluck's billionaire brother Thaksin Shinawatra as premier -- such an offence could lead to her removal and a ban from politics.
  
"We have asked for five more witnesses... the court has not yet made a decision on that request," he told AFP on Monday, requesting anonymity.
   
The court could also extend its verdict to key cabinet members who endorsed the decision to remove Thawil, potentially dislodging a layer of ruling party decision-makers with ties to Thaksin, who lives overseas to avoid jail for corruption convictions.
   
Six months of political street protests have so far failed to force Yingluck from office.
   
But observers say the legal challenges appear poised to end her administration.
   
Yingluck has also been charged by the National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) with neglect of duty in connection with a costly and bungled rice subsidy scheme that critics say fomented rampant corruption.
   
If indicted on those charges, Yingluck would be suspended from office and face an impeachment vote in the upper house of parliament that could lead to a five-year ban from politics.
   
"If the Constitutional Court does not rule against Yingluck -- which I think it will -- then the NACC will at least impeach her and she would have to step down while the Senate decides on convicting her," said Paul Chambers, director of research at the Institute of South East Asian Affairs at Chiang Mai University.
   
Critics accuse the Constitutional Court of rushing through Yingluck's case and allege previous rulings show that it is politically biased against the Shinawatras.
   
In 2008, the court forced two Thaksin-linked prime ministers from office.
   
The Constitutional Court in March nullified a February general election disrupted by protesters, leaving the kingdom in legislative limbo with only a caretaker government.
   
Thaksin-allied parties won every previous election for more than a decade, helped by strong support in the northern half of the kingdom.
   
Election authorities and the ruling party have agreed on July 20 for new polls to find a way through the political paralysis, which has chiselled away at Thailand's once-dynamic growth.


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Source: AFP


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