Former Thai PM Yingluck Shinawatra has 'fled country' ahead of trial verdict

Londoner/Lahori

Minister (2k+ posts)
Yingluck trial: Ex-PM 'flees Thailand' ahead of verdict





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The rice scheme was one of several controversies that overshadowed Ms Yingluck's time in officeFormer Thai PM Yingluck Shinawatra has fled abroad, sources say, ahead of a verdict in her trial over a rice subsidy scheme.

Sources close to her party say she made the decision to leave unexpectedly, shortly before the verdict was due in Bangkok.
Ms Yingluck failed to appear at the Supreme Court in Bangkok on Friday for the verdict on charges of negligence.
The court issued an arrest warrant for her and confiscated her bail.

Her lawyers told the court she had been unable to attend because she was ill. But the court rejected this and delayed the verdict to 27 September.

Ms Yingluck has denied any wrongdoing in the scheme which cost Thailand billions of dollars. If found guilty, she could be jailed for up to 10 years and permanently banned from politics.

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Hundreds of Ms Yingluck's supporters had gathered outside the courtSources within Ms Yingluck's Puea Thai Party told Reuters that she had "definitely left Thailand" but did not give details of her whereabouts.

Earlier, Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha said all routes out of the country were being closely monitored.

"I just learned that she did not show up [at court]," he told reporters. "I have ordered border checkpoints to be stepped up."
In another development, a former Thai minister also charged in connection with the rice subsidy scheme was jailed for 42 years on Friday.

Boonsong Teriyapirom was found guilty of falsifying rice deals between Thailand and China.

Source: http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-41046993

 
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Londoner/Lahori

Minister (2k+ posts)
Re: OPPS!! SHAREEF'S BUSINESS PARTNER, Yingluck trial: Ex-PM 'flees Thailand' ahead of verdict

Z
Nawaz-Sharif-in-Thailand-on-a-three-day-official-visit..jpg
photo proof​
Z

images

bad news all around for "shareefain", cycle of corruption has certain age, from then on, it all goes down the hill.
These two are business partners in uk & newzealand,
after becoming pm, first foreign visit of nawaz was to visit her in thailand..
Z
Z
 
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Kamran Stu

MPA (400+ posts)
Thailand’s ousted PM has fled the country, Similar kind of situtation as ours Corruption

Thailand’s ousted PM has fled the country: sources By Reuters BANGKOK — Ousted Thai prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra has fled the country ahead of a verdict against her in a negligence trial brought by the junta that overthrew her, sources close to the Shinawatra family said on Friday. Yingluck, 50, whose family has dominated Thai politics for more than 15 years, failed to show up at court for judgment in a case centered on the multi-billion dollar losses incurred by a rice subsidy scheme for farmers. Overthrown in 2014, Yingluck had faced up to 10 years in prison if found guilty. “She has definitely left Thailand,” said one source, who is also a member of the Shinawatra’s Puea Thai Party. The sources did not say where she was now. The Supreme Court issued an arrest warrant after saying it did not believe her excuse that she could not attend the court hearing because of an ear problem, but there was no sign of police showing up at her house. “It is possible that she has fled already,” Deputy Prime Minister Prawit Wongsuwan told reporters. Yingluck’s lawyer, Norrawit Lalaeng, said her team had told him on Friday morning she had an “ear fluid imbalance” and could not attend court. He said he was unaware whether she was still in the country. Her spokeswoman declined to comment. Yingluck’s brother Thaksin Shinawatra, who heads the political clan, was overthrown in a 2006 coup and fled into exile to escape corruption charges that he said were aimed at demolishing the populist movement he founded. The struggle between that movement and a Bangkok-centered royalist and pro-military elite has been at the heart of years of turmoil in Thailand. The verdict against Yingluck was widely seen as having the potential to reignite tensions, though the junta has largely snuffed out open opposition. The Supreme Court said the verdict would now be delivered on Sept. 27. Yingluck last commented on social media on Thursday, saying on her Facebook page that she would not be able to meet supporters at court because of the security measures. She had been banned from traveling abroad at the start of the trial in 2015 and has attended previous hearings. SUPPORTERS GATHER Hundreds of Yingluck supporters had gathered outside the court on Friday where around 4,000 police had been deployed. Some held roses while others wore white gloves with the word “love” on them. Modal Trigger Supporters of Yinluck Shinawatra shout as they wait for her arrival at the Supreme Court in Bangkok.Getty Images If Yingluck fled it would disappoint her supporters and make her opponents feel vindicated, said Thitinan Pongsudhirak, director of the Institute of Security and International Studies at Chulalongkorn University. “It does not help with Thailand’s division and polarization,” he said. Under the rice subsidy program, Yingluck’s administration paid rice farmers up to 50 percent more than market prices. It left Thailand with huge rice stockpiles and caused $8 billion in losses. Yingluck has said she was only in charge of coming up with the policy but not the day-to-day management of the scheme. In a related case on Friday, the Supreme Court sentenced Yingluck’s former commerce minister Boonsong Teriyapirom to 42 years in jail after finding him guilty of falsifying government-to-government rice deals between Thailand and China in 2013. Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, who led the coup against Yingluck’s government in the name of ending political turmoil, has promised that an election will be held next year. Yingluck had been banned from politics for five years in 2015 by the junta’s legislature for alleged graft in the rice-purchasing program. https://nypost.com/2017/08/25/thailands-ousted-pm-has-fled-the-country-sources/
 

chandaa

Prime Minister (20k+ posts)
Re: OPPS!! SHAREEF'S BUSINESS PARTNER, Yingluck trial: Ex-PM 'flees Thailand' ahead of verdict

Mujhey kiyun nikalaa - poochaa nahin iss ne :P
 

Kamran Stu

MPA (400+ posts)
Samsung CEO Jay Y. Lee given five-year jail sentence for bribery-Setting the example

Samsung leader Jay Y. Lee given five-year jail sentence for bribery Joyce Lee and Yuna Park SEOUL (Reuters) - The billionaire head of South Korea’s Samsung Group, Jay Y. Lee, was sentenced to five years in jail for bribery on Friday in a watershed for the country’s decades-long economic order dominated by powerful, family-run conglomerates. After a six-month trial over a scandal that brought down the then president, Park Geun-hye, a court ruled that Lee had paid bribes in anticipation of favours from Park. The court also found Lee guilty of hiding assets abroad, embezzlement and perjury. Lee, the 49-year-old heir to one of the world’s biggest corporate empires, has been held since February on charges that he bribed Park to help secure control of a conglomerate that owns Samsung Electronics, the world’s leading smartphone and chip maker, and has interests ranging from drugs and home appliances to insurance and hotels. Lee, who emerged stony-faced from the Seoul courtroom in a dark suit, but without a tie, and holding a document envelope, was escorted by justice ministry officials back to his detention centre. “This case is a matter of Lee Jae-yong and Samsung Group executives, who had been steadily preparing for Lee’s succession ... bribing the president,” Seoul Central District Court Judge Kim Jin-dong said, using Lee’s Korean name. Kim said that as the group’s heir apparent, Lee “stood to benefit the most” from any political favours for Samsung. Lee denied wrongdoing, and one of his lawyers, Song Wu-cheol, said he would appeal. “The entire guilty verdict is unacceptable,” Song said, adding he was confident his client’s innocence would be affirmed by a higher court. The case is expected to be appealed all the way up to the Supreme Court, likely next year. The five year-sentence - one of the longest given to a South Korean business leader - is a landmark for South Korea, where the family-run conglomerates - or chaebols - have long been revered for helping transform the once war-ravaged country into a global economic powerhouse. But they have more recently been criticized for holding back the economy and stifling small businesses and start-ups. Samsung, a symbol of the country’s rise from poverty following the 1950-53 Korean War, has come to epitomize the cosy and sometimes corrupt ties between politicians and the chaebols. “The ruling is a turning point for chaebols,” said Chang Sea-jin, a business professor at Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology. “In the past, chaebols weren’t afraid of laws because they were lenient. Now, Lee’s ruling sets a precedent for strict enforcement of laws, and chaebols should be wary.” Under South Korean law, sentences of more than three years cannot be suspended. LEADERSHIP VACUUM The third-generation de facto head of the powerful Samsung Group, Lee has effectively directed operations since his father, Lee Kun-hee, was incapacitated by a heart attack in 2014. Some investors worry a prolonged leadership vacuum could slow decision-making at the group, which has more than five dozen affiliate companies and assets of 363.2 trillion won ($322.13 billion). Its listed companies make up about 30 percent of the market value of South Korea’s KOSPI stock index. Many tycoons, including Lee’s father, were convicted of crimes in the past, ranging from bribery, embezzlement and tax evasion, only to get presidential pardons, as both the government and the public feared going too hard on them would hurt the economy. Lee Jae-yong, Samsung Group heir, leaves after his verdict trial at the Seoul Central District Court in Seoul, South Korea August 25, 2017. Lee was handed down 5 years jail sentence while prosecutors sought a 12-year in prison.Chung Sung-Jun/Pool But South Korea’s new liberal president, Moon Jae-in, who won a May election, has pledged to rein in the chaebols, empower minority shareholders and end the practice of pardoning tycoons convicted of white-collar crime. The presidential Blue House said in a statement that it hopes the ruling will serve as an opportunity to “end the nexus of business and politics that has held back the country.” In a June interview with Reuters, Moon said he did not believe Samsung’s operations depended just on Lee. “When Lee was taken into custody, the share prices of Samsung went up,” Moon said. “If we were to succeed in reforming the running of the chaebols and also increasing transparency, I believe this will not only help the economic power of Korea but also help to make the chaebols themselves more competitive.” Investors say shares in chaebol companies trade at lower prices than they would otherwise because of their opaque corporate governance - the so-called Korea Discount. Shares of Samsung Electronics dropped more than 1 percent, and other group companies, including Samsung C&T and Samsung SDS, also turned lower after the verdict. The court said Samsung’s financial support of entities backed by a friend of Park’s, Choi Soon-sil, constituted bribery, including 7.2 billion won ($6.4 million) in sponsoring the equestrian career of Choi’s daughter. In return, prosecutors say, Samsung sought government support for the 2015 merger of two of its affiliates, which helped Lee tighten control of the conglomerate. His lawyers had argued that the merger was done for business reasons. Some criminal lawyers had expected Lee to be found innocent of the major charges, as much of the evidence at the trial has been circumstantial. The appeals court and the Supreme Court might put a greater emphasis on prosecutors to provide direct proof of quid pro quo, the lawyers said. PARK SUPPORTERS OUTRAGED Park, who was forced from office in March, faces her own corruption trial, with a ruling expected later this year. Prosecutors have argued that Park and Lee took part in the same act of bribery - so Lee’s conviction would appear ominous for the former president. Hundreds of Park's diehard supporters who rallied outside the court on Friday reacted with outrage to the ruling. "Our ultimate goal is Park's acquittal and release," Kim Won-joon, a 62-year-old former construction worker said. "We worry how today's guilty verdict for Lee would affect Park's ruling." Such supporters are a minority compared with the huge crowds that turned out in Seoul every week to call for Park's ouster after the bribery scandal surfaced late last year. Public approval of Lee's prosecution may underscore growing frustration in Asia's fourth-largest economy that the wealth amassed by conglomerates has not trickled down. "I think it was difficult for a court to ignore public opinion, given that the scandal rocked the country," said Chung Sun-sup, chief executive of research firm Chaebul.com. "The five-year sentence was low given that he was found guilty of all the charges. I think the court gave him a lighter sentence, taking into account Samsung's importance to the economy." Additional reporting by Jack Kim, Hyunjoo Jin and Dahee Kim, Writing by Soyoung Kim; Editing by Ian Geoghegan, Robert Birsel https://www.reuters.com/article/us-samsung-lee-idUSKCN1B41VC
 

Solidify

MPA (400+ posts)
Re: OPPS!! SHAREEF'S BUSINESS PARTNER, Yingluck trial: Ex-PM 'flees Thailand' ahead of verdict

Yeah baat samaj ne ki liyee ha
Puraa 3rd world nation's ka leaders unable to
Management of the nation's a haakumaat anywhere
 

Shah Shatranj

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Protests after 'godman' Ram Rahim Singh's rape conviction kill at least 14 (India)

[h=1]Protests after 'godman' Ram Rahim Singh's rape conviction kill at least 14[/h]
PANCHKULA, India (Reuters) - Violent protests erupted on Friday, killing at least 14 people, after a court convicted a self-styled “godman” of raping two women, angering thousands of his supporters who said he was innocent, police and officials said.
Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh, the head of a social welfare and spiritual group, was found guilty of raping two followers in a case dating back to 2002 at the headquarters of his Dera Sacha Sauda group in the northern town of Sirsa.
Supporters rampaged in response, attacking railway stations, petrol stations and television vans in towns across Punjab and Haryana, witnesses said.
At least 14 people were killed, most of them in Panchkula town where the court returned its verdict on Singh, a federal interior ministry official said. More than 200 were wounded in the two states, he said.
Dozens of cars were burning in Panchkula town while a body lay on a roadside. Television footage showed frantic scenes outside a hospital in Panchkula, with medical staff hurriedly transferring injured patients from ambulances on to wheelchairs and stretchers. Smoke could be seen rising in another part of town.
Protests also erupted in New Delhi and in the neighbouring state of Rajasthan. Supporters of the godman set fire to some buses and two empty train coaches in the capital.
Singh commands a following that he claims is in the millions. Supporters started gathering in the streets outside the court in Panchkula on Thursday.
“The court has convicted Ram Rahim Singh of rape charges,” Kohal Dev Sharma, a lawyer at the court said.


Rioters smash television trucks during violence in Panchkula, India, August 25, 2017.
Cathal McNaughton
“Justice has finally prevailed.”
Singh, a burly, bearded man who has scripted and starred in his own films, denied the charges. He had called on his followers through a video message to remain peaceful.
A.K. Dhir, one of his lawyers, said Singh was innocent and his followers had every right to express their outrage.
Singh’s sentence will be announced later in the month, media reported. Sharma said he faced a minimum of seven years in prison.
Television channels showed motorcycles, cars and buses in flames as hundreds of police personnel in riot gear watched helplessly. The mob also toppled a TV outdoor broadcasting van, while several news channels said their journalists were targeted.
The chief minister of Haryana state, Manohar Lal, said in a Twitter post that the administration was monitoring the situation closely and strict action would be taken against people trying to disrupt peace.
Some Indian "holy" men can summon thousands of supporters on to the streets. Their systems of patronage and sermons are hugely popular with people who consider the government has failed them.
In 2014, the attempted arrest of another guru on murder charges ended with his followers attacking police with clubs and stones.
Additional reporting by Manoj Kumar, Rupam Jain, Aditya Kalra, Neha Dasgupta, Krishna N.Das; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani and Nick Macfie

http://in.reuters.com/article/ram-r...al&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer

 

Shah Shatranj

Chief Minister (5k+ posts)
Re: Protests after 'godman' Ram Rahim Singh's rape conviction kill at least 14 (India)

DIDoZI-V0AAIoWy.jpg


Look at this joker who has made Hindism hostage
Hinduism feeling fear of this so called godman's rise and
feared Brahamins have jailed him
such a touchy religion
 

Indika

Banned
Re: Thailand’s ousted PM has fled the country, Similar kind of situtation as ours Corruption

Thailand’s ousted PM has fled the country: sources By Reuters BANGKOK — Ousted Thai prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra has fled the country ahead of a verdict against her in a negligence trial brought by the junta that overthrew her, sources close to the Shinawatra family said on Friday. Yingluck, 50, whose family has dominated Thai politics for more than 15 years, failed to show up at court for judgment in a case centered on the multi-billion dollar losses incurred by a rice subsidy scheme for farmers. Overthrown in 2014, Yingluck had faced up to 10 years in prison if found guilty. “She has definitely left Thailand,” said one source, who is also a member of the Shinawatra’s Puea Thai Party. The sources did not say where she was now. The Supreme Court issued an arrest warrant after saying it did not believe her excuse that she could not attend the court hearing because of an ear problem, but there was no sign of police showing up at her house. “It is possible that she has fled already,” Deputy Prime Minister Prawit Wongsuwan told reporters. Yingluck’s lawyer, Norrawit Lalaeng, said her team had told him on Friday morning she had an “ear fluid imbalance” and could not attend court. He said he was unaware whether she was still in the country. Her spokeswoman declined to comment. Yingluck’s brother Thaksin Shinawatra, who heads the political clan, was overthrown in a 2006 coup and fled into exile to escape corruption charges that he said were aimed at demolishing the populist movement he founded. The struggle between that movement and a Bangkok-centered royalist and pro-military elite has been at the heart of years of turmoil in Thailand. The verdict against Yingluck was widely seen as having the potential to reignite tensions, though the junta has largely snuffed out open opposition. The Supreme Court said the verdict would now be delivered on Sept. 27. Yingluck last commented on social media on Thursday, saying on her Facebook page that she would not be able to meet supporters at court because of the security measures. She had been banned from traveling abroad at the start of the trial in 2015 and has attended previous hearings. SUPPORTERS GATHER Hundreds of Yingluck supporters had gathered outside the court on Friday where around 4,000 police had been deployed. Some held roses while others wore white gloves with the word “love” on them. Modal Trigger Supporters of Yinluck Shinawatra shout as they wait for her arrival at the Supreme Court in Bangkok.Getty Images If Yingluck fled it would disappoint her supporters and make her opponents feel vindicated, said Thitinan Pongsudhirak, director of the Institute of Security and International Studies at Chulalongkorn University. “It does not help with Thailand’s division and polarization,” he said. Under the rice subsidy program, Yingluck’s administration paid rice farmers up to 50 percent more than market prices. It left Thailand with huge rice stockpiles and caused $8 billion in losses. Yingluck has said she was only in charge of coming up with the policy but not the day-to-day management of the scheme. In a related case on Friday, the Supreme Court sentenced Yingluck’s former commerce minister Boonsong Teriyapirom to 42 years in jail after finding him guilty of falsifying government-to-government rice deals between Thailand and China in 2013. Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, who led the coup against Yingluck’s government in the name of ending political turmoil, has promised that an election will be held next year. Yingluck had been banned from politics for five years in 2015 by the junta’s legislature for alleged graft in the rice-purchasing program. https://nypost.com/2017/08/25/thailands-ousted-pm-has-fled-the-country-sources/


military martial law and king loyalist alliance also working in thailand against democracy .
 
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Indika

Banned
Re: OPPS!! SHAREEF'S BUSINESS PARTNER, Yingluck trial: Ex-PM 'flees Thailand' ahead of verdict

Yeah baat samaj ne ki liyee ha
Puraa 3rd world nation's ka leaders unable to
Management of the nation's a haakumaat anywhere

military mulla alliance against democracy in third world .
 

Indika

Banned
Re: Protests after 'godman' Ram Rahim Singh's rape conviction kill at least 14 (India)

DIDoZI-V0AAIoWy.jpg


Look at this joker who has made Hindism hostage
Hinduism feeling fear of this so called godman's rise and
feared Brahamins have jailed him
such a touchy religion



is nautanki ka kam ho gaya , jail me chakki pis raha hai.:lol::lol::lol:

nothing like red mosque terrorist maulvi abdul wahab.
 
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