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Ex-prime minister to return to Thailand on Tuesday

BANGKOK (AFP) – Thailand’s former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra is set to return to the kingdom on Tuesday, the same day as a key parliamentary vote could end a political deadlock, his daughter said.

The 74-year-old billionaire was ousted in a 2006 military coup and has spent 15 years in self-exile.

Thaksin has long said he wanted to return home but faces multiple criminal charges that he said are politically motivated.

“On Tuesday, August 22, 9am, I will pick up my father Thaksin at Don Muang Airport,” his daughter Paetongtarn Shinawatra, who is one of the Pheu Thai Party’s candidates for prime minister, said on Instagram.

Thaksin later said he was definitely coming home this time.

“I don’t want to offend people. I want everyone to love each other. I want the country to be peaceful,” he told BBC Thai yesterday. “I’m old, I miss my grandchildren, I want to be with my family.”

PHOTO: AFP

His return will coincide with an afternoon vote on whether to approve Srettha Thavisin – from the Thaksin-linked Pheu Thai Party – as prime minister and end months of political uncertainty since a May general election.

To become premiere, Srettha needs to muster a majority across the lower house of 500 elected MPs, and the 250-member senate that was handpicked by the kingdom’s last junta.

The progressive Move Forward Party (MFP) won the most parliamentary seats in the election but the senate blocked its leader from becoming prime minister, after being spooked by a controversial policy to reform the kingdom’s harsh royal insult laws.

Pheu Thai came second in the race and has been trying to form a government.

While he’s long been a divisive figure, political analysts do not expect Thaksin’s presence to kick off protests.

“I think Thai people have moved on from Thaksin,” political analyst Verapat Pariyawong told AFP.

Verapat expects Thaksin will likely be taken to court upon arrival.

“His return means that he is confident that when he lands in Thailand he won’t be a victim of political games and that the steps are there to make sure he is in a comfortable position,” Verapat said. “The real question is whether he will actually come back, and if yes, where did he get that assurance from?”

Thaksin has lived in self-exile, mostly in Dubai, since 2008 and regularly addresses  supporters on the Clubhouse social media platform using the alias Tony Woodsome.

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