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Thai legislature votes to impeach ex-prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra

After losing the impeachment vote, Thailand's first female leader could also be imprisoned for 10 years in criminal charges over a controversial rice subsidy scheme

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Former Thai prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra at the parliament building in Bangkok on Thursday. Photo: EPA

Thailand’s military-appointed legislature on Friday voted to impeach former prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra for her role in overseeing a government rice subsidy programme that lost billions of dollars, a move that could further polarise a divided nation plagued by political turmoil and coups for a decade.

The vote, which means Yingluck will be banned from politics for five years, came just after the attorney general’s office announced separate plans to indict her on criminal charges for negligence related to losses and alleged corruption in the rice scheme.

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No date has been set for the formal indictment, but if convicted, Yingluck could face 10 years in jail.

Yingluck’s supporters see the moves as part of an effort to deal a final blow to her political party after the military seized power in a coup in May, overthrowing a government elected by popular vote in 2011.

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Impeachment required a three-fifths vote of the legislature’s 220 members, and on Friday 190 voted against Yingluck. Most members of the legislature are part of the military or political opponents of Yingluck and past governments allied with her brother, former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted in a 2006 coup.

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