Former Thai PM Thaksin Shinawatra Released on Parole in Bangkok

Former Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra was released on parole from Bangkok's Klong Prem Central Prison on May 11. He reunited with family and thanked supporters before reporting to a probation office. Thaksin, 76, must wear an electronic monitoring device and cannot leave Thailand until his sentence ends on September 9. He remains involved in a separate royal defamation case after a lower court acquitted him.

Key Points: Thaksin Shinawatra Released on Parole in Thailand

  • Thaksin released from Klong Prem Central Prison on May 11
  • He served two-thirds of his one-year sentence
  • Must wear electronic monitor and comply with parole conditions
  • Faces separate royal defamation case on appeal
3 min read

Former Thai PM Thaksin released on parole

Thailand's former PM Thaksin Shinawatra is released on parole after serving two-thirds of his one-year sentence, reuniting with family amid tight security.

"I am grateful to all supporters who came to welcome me today. - Thaksin Shinawatra"

Bangkok, May 11

Thailand's convicted former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra was released from Bangkok's Klong Prem Central Prison on Monday after being allowed to complete the remaining four months of his one-year sentence on parole.

Thaksin made a public appearance at around 7:40 a.m. local time, reuniting with family members in front of the prison, where he had served two-thirds of his sentence required by standard parole criteria, Xinhua news agency reported.

He and his family paid tribute to the Thai flag, expressed gratitude to the supporters, and then left by car at around 7:55 a.m. local time.

As he departed to report to a Bangkok probation office, crowds of supporters wearing red shirts greeted the former prime minister as they gathered outside the prison compound under tight police security.

According to the Department of Corrections, Thaksin was among over 850 inmates granted early release at a parole committee meeting last month, citing his age of over 70 and the fact that he had less than a year of jail time left to justify the eligibility.

The department has said that he must comply with strict probation conditions, including wearing an electronic monitoring device, accepting parole supervision, reporting to the regulatory authorities on time, and not leaving the country until his one-year sentence formally concludes on September 9.

The Parole Committee under the Ministry of Justice of Thailand held a meeting on April 29 and decided to allow Thaksin to be released on parole on May 11.

Thaksin, now 76 years old, served twice as prime minister of the Southeast Asian nation, winning elections in 2001 and 2005. A military coup in 2006 cut short his second term, and he went into self-imposed exile in 2008.

Upon returning to Thailand in August 2023, he was taken into custody to serve eight years of imprisonment on three charges stemming from his time in office.

After serving less than a day behind bars, he was transferred from a Bangkok prison facility to a police hospital, citing critical health concerns. His sentence was subsequently commuted to one year following a royal pardon request.

Thaksin returned to prison on Sept. 9, 2025, after the Supreme Court ruled that his six-month hospital detention was unlawfully allowed and did not count toward time served.

The former prime minister remains embroiled in a separate royal defamation case after the attorney general filed an appeal against a lower court's decision to acquit him over remarks he made in a 2015 interview with foreign media.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

A
Arun Y
Thaksin was popular with the rural poor - same base as many Indian leaders. The red shirt supporters show he still has a strong following despite his legal troubles. Reminds me of how certain leaders back home retain loyal supporters even after convictions.
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Nikhil C
76 years old, wearing an electronic monitor, and still fighting a royal defamation case. This is like a Bollywood thriller! 🎬 The political drama in Southeast Asia is as complex as our own. Hope he gets some peace finally.
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Priya S
The parole conditions seem quite strict - electronic monitoring, reporting regularly, no leaving country. That's more than what many Indian politicians face after being out on bail! Our legal system could learn a thing or two about accountability.
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Rohit L
The way he was rushed to hospital after just hours in prison seems very convenient. 🤔 And now the Supreme Court says that didn't count as time served. Honestly, these elite prisoners always get special treatment - in Thailand, India, everywhere. Sad reality.
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Kavya N
He was democratically elected twice, but a coup removed him. Now he's out on parole at 76. There's a lesson here about how fragile democracy can be in our region. Let's value our democratic processes more, especially in India. 🇮🇳
S
Siddharth J

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