Bangkok - Thailand's fugitive former premier Thaksin
Shinawatra has divorced his wife of 32 years, sealing the separation
at the Thai consulate in Hong Kong, close aides confirmed Saturday.
Thaksin, who faces a two-year jail term if he returns to Thailand,
announced his divorce from his wife, Pojaman, to political allies who
attended a dinner with him in Hong Kong Friday evening, the Bangkok
Post reported in the fornt page article.
The news was confirmed by Thaksin spokesman Pongthep
Thepkanjanakkesman and other sources close to the once all-powerful
politician.
'The divorce was for legal reasons,' said one close aide to
Thaksin who asked to remain anonymous. 'This was very tough
emotionally for them.'
Media reports speculated that the divorce may have been necessary
to improve the family's efforts to reclaim 76 billion baht (2.2
billion dollars) in frozen assets in Thai banks.
Much of the Shinawatra assets are in Pojaman's name. Thaksin, once
ranked among Thailand's richest men, made his fortune off government
telecommunications' concessions.
He used his private fortune to enter politics, setting up the Thai
Rak Thai Party, which won the 2001 election on a platform of populist
policies and kept him in power until he was toppled in a bloodless
military coup in September 2006.
The reported separation comes almost a month after Thailand's
Supreme Court for Political Office Holders found Thaksin guilty of
abuse of power for allowing his wife to bid on a prime plot of
Bangkok land at a government auction in 2003 when he was prime
minister.
Although the court found Thaksin guilty and sentenced him to two
years in jail, Pojaman was cleared of corruption charges in the case
because she was not a public office holder.
However, in August, Thailand's Criminal Court had found Pojaman
guilty of tax evasion and sentenced her to three years in prison.
Thaksin and Pojaman fled to London on August 11 after receiving
court permission to travel to Beijing to attend the opening ceremony
of the Beijing Olympics.
Their three children joined them in the British capital, where the
family owns property.
But the Shinawatras' future was thrown into flux earlier this
month when Britain revoked Thaksin's and Pojaman's tourist visas in
response to the verdicts against them.
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