Former Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra warns of prolonged economic hardship if junta remains

Fugitive former Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra warned Thailand’s ruling generals on Tuesday that a prolonged stay in power will only worsen economic hardship in Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy.
The junta, which took power following a May 2014 coup, has struggled to revive Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy amid falling exports and high household debt and critics say economic mismanagement is the biggest threat to its hold on power.
Speaking to Reuters in Singapore, Thaksin, 66, said the junta lacked the vision and talent to fix an economy in disarray.
“It is a government with no freedom and no pool of talent to drive the economy,” Thaksin said. “The longer they stay, the longer economic hardship is going to be there.”
A decade of turbulent politics has pitted Thaksin and his sister, former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, whose government was ousted in the 2014 coup, against a royalist-military establishment that sees the Shinawatras as a threat.
Thaksin on Tuesday denied long-standing reports he had struck a back-room deal with the military to leave his personal and family interests untouched in exchange for a retreat from politics.