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Thaksin Sentenced to 1 Year in Prison Over Hospital Leave Case

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2 minutes ago, newbee2022 said:

I pity him. Good man.

so you condone his actions  and the depth of his corruption and killings    you are the one that needs pity 

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  • Lock him up. He already wriggled out of the first try. No bail, no appeal, like monopoly, "Go straight to jail". 

  • He will not serve one day in a prison cell.

  • Well you could knock me over with a feather at this time. No way I would predict this.I thought he was tipped off and all was okay for his return. Now lets see if he (actually ) spends time in a

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Phumtham will definitely visit 'Thaksin', believes he didn't do anything wrong from the start, says he was touched by the image of the "Big Boss" in a prison uniform, and hails him as a hero of democracy.

 

September 10, 2025, at the Ministry of Interior, outgoing Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Interior Phumtham Wechayachai spoke about former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who is currently imprisoned at Klong Prem Central Prison. When asked if they had discussed who would visit him now that visits are allowed, he said they hadn't talked about it yet.

 

"But personally, I will definitely go visit Thaksin because I don't feel that he did anything wrong from the beginning until now. He was a victim of a power grab that led to an illegitimate government. So, many things that were set up are just waiting to be proven.

 

https://x.com/KhaosodEnglish/status/1965728612776353853

 

22 minutes ago, MikeandDow said:

so you condone his actions  and the depth of his corruption and killings    you are the one that needs pity 

problems with reading or problem with understanding? Or both?

You'll show me where I 

"condone his actions  and the depth of his corruption and killings"   

I'm waiting.......😶

FYI, the Bangkok Hilton is Baang Kwang, not Khlong Prem.

BTW, years ago there was a prison called Taksin Prison, which was in Thonburi in the late 80s. 

41 minutes ago, MikeandDow said:

so you condone his actions  and the depth of his corruption and killings    you are the one that needs pity 

so you condone his actions  and the depth of his corruption and killings    you are the one that needs pity 

problems with reading or problem with understanding? Or both?

You'll show me where I 

"condone his actions  and the depth of his corruption and killings"   

I'm waiting.......😶

I'm still waiting......!

1 hour ago, MikeandDow said:

And less not forget the 2500 people he was responsible for killing crime against humanity, and who started the trouble in the south  Thaskin  he is a con man and totally corrupt and you seemed to think he deserves sympathy          

 

2500 drug dealers you mean? 

3 minutes ago, newbee2022 said:

so you condone his actions  and the depth of his corruption and killings    you are the one that needs pity 

problems with reading or problem with understanding? Or both?

You'll show me where I 

"condone his actions  and the depth of his corruption and killings"   

I'm waiting.......😶

I'm still waiting......!

read the news or look up thaskin corruption or war on drugs google is your friend 

On 9/9/2025 at 12:02 PM, dinsdale said:

He will not serve one day in a prison cell.

Probably @Liverpool Lou will know it better, as everything.

But I agree with you.

1 minute ago, MikeandDow said:

read the news or look up thaskin corruption or war on drugs google is your friend 

Ok, conclusion: you can't answer but talking bullocks

15 minutes ago, Hunz Kittisak said:

2500 drug dealers you mean? 

When the Independent Committee on the Casualties of the 2003 War on Drugs established by the Surayud Chulanont government published its report in 2008, it concluded that 1,372 of the people killed had no drug related records.

More importantly, the chair of the commission concluded that all 2,873 killings should be considered crimes against humanity. Since the day the report was published, not a single case has been pursued.

This culture of impunity is our national shame. Thaksin's "war on drugs" was broadly welcomed by many Thais, at the time, largely because of the terrible impact of the ya ba (methamphetamine) scourge that was sweeping through the country. The media almost gleefully reported the weekly and monthly killing tallies, as provinces sought to outdo each other.

The ethnic-religious conflict ignited by Thaksin's policies in the three deep South provinces has even more tragic and longer term consequences. Since 2004, 5,700 people have died, with 1,000 imprisoned, awaiting trial for treason, which carries the death penalty. In 2002 these three provinces had a mere three cases of violent crimes, in 2005 the number jumped to 1,500 cases.

The Tak Bai incident paints a dark stain across our national conscience. But our culture of immunity remains intact. Our leaders, our police, our armed forces continue to commit terrible acts of injustice with impunity.

The Sunday Times article said: "Lawyers have suggested that Thaksin's drug war might amount to a crime against humanity under Article Seven of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court [ICC], set up in 1992."



open your eyes  

8 minutes ago, newbee2022 said:

Ok, conclusion: you can't answer but talking bullocks

this is only part of his evil    there is a mountain of news  articles on his corruption  or just bury your head in the sand 

 

When the Independent Committee on the Casualties of the 2003 War on Drugs established by the Surayud Chulanont government published its report in 2008, it concluded that 1,372 of the people killed had no drug related records.

More importantly, the chair of the commission concluded that all 2,873 killings should be considered crimes against humanity. Since the day the report was published, not a single case has been pursued.

This culture of impunity is our national shame. Thaksin's "war on drugs" was broadly welcomed by many Thais, at the time, largely because of the terrible impact of the ya ba (methamphetamine) scourge that was sweeping through the country. The media almost gleefully reported the weekly and monthly killing tallies, as provinces sought to outdo each other.

The ethnic-religious conflict ignited by Thaksin's policies in the three deep South provinces has even more tragic and longer term consequences. Since 2004, 5,700 people have died, with 1,000 imprisoned, awaiting trial for treason, which carries the death penalty. In 2002 these three provinces had a mere three cases of violent crimes, in 2005 the number jumped to 1,500 cases.

The Tak Bai incident paints a dark stain across our national conscience. But our culture of immunity remains intact. Our leaders, our police, our armed forces continue to commit terrible acts of injustice with impunity.

The Sunday Times article said: "Lawyers have suggested that Thaksin's drug war might amount to a crime against humanity under Article Seven of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court [ICC], set up in 1992."



 

5 minutes ago, MikeandDow said:

When the Independent Committee on the Casualties of the 2003 War on Drugs established by the Surayud Chulanont government published its report in 2008, it concluded that 1,372 of the people killed had no drug related records.

More importantly, the chair of the commission concluded that all 2,873 killings should be considered crimes against humanity. Since the day the report was published, not a single case has been pursued.

This culture of impunity is our national shame. Thaksin's "war on drugs" was broadly welcomed by many Thais, at the time, largely because of the terrible impact of the ya ba (methamphetamine) scourge that was sweeping through the country. The media almost gleefully reported the weekly and monthly killing tallies, as provinces sought to outdo each other.

The ethnic-religious conflict ignited by Thaksin's policies in the three deep South provinces has even more tragic and longer term consequences. Since 2004, 5,700 people have died, with 1,000 imprisoned, awaiting trial for treason, which carries the death penalty. In 2002 these three provinces had a mere three cases of violent crimes, in 2005 the number jumped to 1,500 cases.

The Tak Bai incident paints a dark stain across our national conscience. But our culture of immunity remains intact. Our leaders, our police, our armed forces continue to commit terrible acts of injustice with impunity.

The Sunday Times article said: "Lawyers have suggested that Thaksin's drug war might amount to a crime against humanity under Article Seven of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court [ICC], set up in 1992."



open your eyes  

The committee was established by the Surayud illegitimate government. A vile man who’s more corrupt and well known for human rights abuses than anyone in recent Thai history. 
And he was a Thaksin hater as were his masters in the military. 
 

Open your eyes 

5 minutes ago, MikeandDow said:

this is only part of his evil    there is a mountain of news  articles on his corruption  or just bury your head in the sand 

 

When the Independent Committee on the Casualties of the 2003 War on Drugs established by the Surayud Chulanont government published its report in 2008, it concluded that 1,372 of the people killed had no drug related records.

More importantly, the chair of the commission concluded that all 2,873 killings should be considered crimes against humanity. Since the day the report was published, not a single case has been pursued.

This culture of impunity is our national shame. Thaksin's "war on drugs" was broadly welcomed by many Thais, at the time, largely because of the terrible impact of the ya ba (methamphetamine) scourge that was sweeping through the country. The media almost gleefully reported the weekly and monthly killing tallies, as provinces sought to outdo each other.

The ethnic-religious conflict ignited by Thaksin's policies in the three deep South provinces has even more tragic and longer term consequences. Since 2004, 5,700 people have died, with 1,000 imprisoned, awaiting trial for treason, which carries the death penalty. In 2002 these three provinces had a mere three cases of violent crimes, in 2005 the number jumped to 1,500 cases.

The Tak Bai incident paints a dark stain across our national conscience. But our culture of immunity remains intact. Our leaders, our police, our armed forces continue to commit terrible acts of injustice with impunity.

The Sunday Times article said: "Lawyers have suggested that Thaksin's drug war might amount to a crime against humanity under Article Seven of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court [ICC], set up in 1992."



 

Good to know and remember this article copied from ???

However, to all times there have been bypasses of law and justice. That's history.

But Thaksin's view and outlook of Thailand's future is captivating, paving the way from  "assembling" factories to manufacturing industry.

Therefore I call him "Good Man".

4 minutes ago, Hunz Kittisak said:

The committee was established by the Surayud illegitimate government. A vile man who’s more corrupt and well known for human rights abuses than anyone in recent Thai history. 
And he was a Thaksin hater as were his masters in the military. 
 

Open your eyes 

google the Full  articles  the UN and other international human rights organizations where involved  thaskin is a corrupt vile evil man and he deserves everything he gets   the thai people are only waking up to the damage he has done to thailand 

 

4 minutes ago, newbee2022 said:

Good to know and remember this article copied from ???

However, to all times there have been bypasses of law and justice. That's history.

But Thaksin's view and outlook of Thailand's future is captivating, paving the way from  "assembling" factories to manufacturing industry.

Therefore I call him "Good Man".

at what cost      need to take your blinkers off    he is in the same class as hitler pol pot ect   you are a laughing stock 

1 minute ago, MikeandDow said:

at what cost      need to take your blinkers off    he is in the same class as hitler pol pot ect   you are a laughing stock 

If I'm a laughing stock....what are you? At least a Loudmouth.

Whatever can be said about Thaksin, he is the one who implemented programs benefiting the poor and drove economic growth. With his policies, he earned widespread support for Phuea Thai, particularly in Isaan. On the other hand, there is corruption, abuse of power, and human rights violations. Like many PMs before and after him, he was ousted in a military coup. I ask myself why? Were things getting better after he was ousted? Last year, he attempted to evade prison by staging a Hollywood-worthy show, with the support of certain elements within the justice system and the medical community. Well, in the end, he's going to prison for a year after all. Certainly a tough decision for a 76-year-old man. May he stay in good health.

2 hours ago, anchadian said:

Phumtham will definitely visit 'Thaksin', believes he didn't do anything wrong from the start, says he was touched by the image of the "Big Boss" in a prison uniform, and hails him as a hero of democracy.

 

September 10, 2025, at the Ministry of Interior, outgoing Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Interior Phumtham Wechayachai spoke about former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who is currently imprisoned at Klong Prem Central Prison. When asked if they had discussed who would visit him now that visits are allowed, he said they hadn't talked about it yet.

 

"But personally, I will definitely go visit Thaksin because I don't feel that he did anything wrong from the beginning until now. He was a victim of a power grab that led to an illegitimate government. So, many things that were set up are just waiting to be proven.

 

https://x.com/KhaosodEnglish/status/1965728612776353853

 

 

 

555.  Thaksin was the perpetrator of a power grab that led to the unelected and farcical Srettha and Ung Ing governments that dumped the Thai economy and living standards deeper into the toilet.  Good riddance to bad rubbish, including the useless Phumtham.  At least we won't need to see him dressed as an elderly ice cream salesman in daily in the media any more.

2 hours ago, RobKray said:

FYI, the Bangkok Hilton is Baang Kwang, not Khlong Prem.

BTW, years ago there was a prison called Taksin Prison, which was in Thonburi in the late 80s. 

lol, named after King Taksin, (different Thai spelling to Thaksin).

There's a statue of him at Wong Wian Yai just across the river in Thonburi.

He was said to be great king but came to a sticky end.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taksin

22 minutes ago, MikeUdon said:

Whatever can be said about Thaksin, he is the one who implemented programs benefiting the poor and drove economic growth. With his policies, he earned widespread support for Phuea Thai, particularly in Isaan. On the other hand, there is corruption, abuse of power, and human rights violations. Like many PMs before and after him, he was ousted in a military coup. I ask myself why? Were things getting better after he was ousted? Last year, he attempted to evade prison by staging a Hollywood-worthy show, with the support of certain elements within the justice system and the medical community. Well, in the end, he's going to prison for a year after all. Certainly a tough decision for a 76-year-old man. May he stay in good health.

 

 

This is all exaggerated as part of the Thaksin PR machine.  He benefited from the tough steps taken by the Chuan government to get Thailand to meet all the IMF requirements which were already met when he took office and took the credit for that, stupidly repaying the loans early as a PR exercise when he could have kept the low interest rate rates to maturity and made profits for Thailand just by buying US treasuries.  He benefited from the rebound from the Tom Yum Kung crisis in Thailand and the rest of Asia and from strong global growth with low inflation.  He had some good ideas but they came from his dynamic advisors, not him.  

 

The Yingluck, Srettha and Ung Ing governments were disastrous for Thais.  Yingluck's rice pledging scam drove Thai farmers to suicide when her government took their rice and didn't pay them for it, leaving their families with no money and nothing to eat.  In the Srettha and Ung Ing governments all the dynamic advisors were long gone and he surrounded himself with elderly yes men like Phumtham and acted on his own ideas - handouts, landbridges and casinos etc, none of which moved the needle.

 

Then there was the massive corruption from someone who came to power with more money than he and his descendants to the Nth generation could ever use in their lifetimes which freed him to do something useful for Thailand, such as reforms.  Yet his only interest was in enriching himself further.

On 9/9/2025 at 6:02 AM, dinsdale said:

He will not serve one day in a prison cell.

Already done 2

10 hours ago, geisha said:

Are there other prisons in Thailand where he could possibly get a * better* stay than in Bangkok ?

Does it matter when his stay is in Bangkok?

15 hours ago, Will B Good said:

In Thailand, only His Majesty the King has the constitutional authority to issue a royal pardon. This power is considered an act of grace, and it applies to both individual and collective pardons 

Can you put your glasses on when reading posts. I said parole, not pardon.

4 hours ago, GreasyFingers said:

Can you put your glasses on when reading posts. I said parole, not pardon.

 

Can you take a big step back and literally .............

16 hours ago, bannork said:

lol, named after King Taksin, (different Thai spelling to Thaksin).

There's a statue of him at Wong Wian Yai just across the river in Thonburi.

He was said to be great king but came to a sticky end.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taksin

I know but many foreigners say it like Taksin, for example Saphan Taksin BTS station.

16 hours ago, Dogmatix said:

 

 

555.  Thaksin was the perpetrator of a power grab that led to the unelected and farcical Srettha and Ung Ing governments that dumped the Thai economy and living standards deeper into the toilet.  Good riddance to bad rubbish, including the useless Phumtham.  At least we won't need to see him dressed as an elderly ice cream salesman in daily in the media any more.

If my memory serves me right, Taksin made billions by causing the Tom Yam Gung crisis in 97. Not sure if he was deputy PM to Barnhart or Big Jiu. Or maybe Finance Minister.

18 hours ago, newbee2022 said:

Good to know and remember this article copied from ???

However, to all times there have been bypasses of law and justice. That's history.

But Thaksin's view and outlook of Thailand's future is captivating, paving the way from  "assembling" factories to manufacturing industry.

Therefore I call him "Good Man".

This might be if interest. I keep old newspapers.

image.png.1df207facdb26bb24a41eb39b0ea94c6.png

5 minutes ago, RobKray said:

If my memory serves me right, Taksin made billions by causing the Tom Yam Gung crisis in 97. Not sure if he was deputy PM to Barnhart or Big Jiu. Or maybe Finance Minister.

Thaskin was at the heart of many fraudulent crisis the guy is a con man steals billions from the people without a care  

let get one thing clear Thaskin is NOT a good man he is evil cares about no one 

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