Refleksi : Di Thailand bisa dilakukan, tetapi di NKRI rezim berkuasa  tidak mau 
mengutik-ngutik harta korupsi Soeharto yang disembunyikan diberbagai pelosok 
dunia. Sama-sama tukang copet jadi  harus diindungi. 

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/court-relieves-thaksin-of-15bn/story-e6frg6so-1225834968367


Court relieves Thaksin of $1.5bn 
Emma-Kate Symons 
From: The Australian 
February 27, 2010 12:00AM 


THAILAND prepared for mass protests as the Supreme Court last night found 
fugitive ex-prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra guilty of abusing his authority 
to benefit his family telecoms company Shin Corp and seized a $1.5 billion 
chunk of his fortune. 

In a judgment expected to influence Thai politics for years to come, the 
highest court said the former leader had hidden his assets and abused his power 
to benefit his companies, and had therefore damaged the public interest.

The court ruled on whether Thaksin's $2.4 billion in assets frozen during the 
2006 military coup were corruptly gained by the tycoon.

The court said that Thaksin -- a hero to the country's rural poor now living in 
Dubai -- had concealed ownerships of telecoms shares, in the dispute over 
whether he had become "unusually rich" during his tenure.

The nine judges agreed unanimously that the ousted prime minister and his 
ex-wife Pojaman Pombejra held more than a billion Shin Corp shares during 
Thaksin's period in office.

This contradicted the Thaksin couple's claims they had sold the shares in the 
then-family owned company to their children and Mrs Thaksin's brother.

However, the court questioned the substance of the prosecution's case saying it 
was unclear.

Fearing an angry reaction and rioting from Thaksin's red-shirt wearing 
grassroots supporters, Prime Minister Ahbisit Vejjajiva ordered tens of 
thousands of troops to keep the peace across Thailand.

As coup rumours were denied, 6000 soldiers were on duty spread out in Bangkok.

The government, which depends on the fragile support of the military for its 
future, said it wanted at all costs to avoid a repeat of the street fighting 
between Red Shirts and security forces last April. The capital was on high 
alert with schools, offices and some businesses around the Supreme Court and 
across the city closed ahead of the verdict.

A skilful user of social media, Thaksin said yesterday on Twitter that his 
wealth was not the fruit of corruption, but of "hard work, brains and sweat". 
He faces two years in jail on corruption charges if he returns to Thailand.

Backers of the Red Shirts, known as the United Front for Democracy against 
Dictatorship (UDD) were urged by their own leadership to keep official 
"judgment day" demonstrations to a minimum along with the vehicle of Thaksin's 
political machine, the Puea Thai Party.

The UDD said it did not want to be held responsible for any violence after the 
ruling and was calling on a million supporters from around Thailand to descend 
on Bangkok on March 12.

Thitinan Pongsudhirak, the director of the Institute for Security and 
International Studies at Bangkok's Chulalongkorn University, told The 
Australian the Red shirts would stage large demonstrations, even if the initial 
reaction to the verdict was relatively muted.

"This is a long drawn-out process," he said.

The Red Shirts' movement was now an "organic" force spread across the country 
with strong grass-roots rural support that went beyond even the popularity of 
Thaksin. "Today was a big step but it is not the final step. The Red Shirts 
will protest. We have to look at the example of last April. They have had some 
coalition problems but they have a lot of foot soldiers especially outside 
Bangkok."

Atiya Achakulwisut, editorial pages editor at the Bangkok Post, said that for 
many people, the issue has gone beyond Thaksin and his wealth.

"It is now about how the national wealth has been unevenly distributed, how 
power has been used unjustly and how a system of privileges has been 
established and allowed to go on," she said.

"For this group of people, whose interests may sometimes overlap with that of 
the pro-Thaksin Red Shirts' but are not necessarily the same, the fight will 
continue long into the future, long after the last word on the verdict is read."

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