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Thai court to deliver PM Yingluck Shinawatra ruling | Thai court to deliver PM Yingluck Shinawatra ruling |
(35 minutes later) | |
A Thai court is expected to rule on whether to remove Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra from office over abuse of power charges. | A Thai court is expected to rule on whether to remove Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra from office over abuse of power charges. |
The Constitutional Court will decide whether Ms Yingluck acted illegally when she transferred her national security chief. | The Constitutional Court will decide whether Ms Yingluck acted illegally when she transferred her national security chief. |
The court could also remove some or all of her cabinet, potentially leaving Thailand in a political vacuum. | The court could also remove some or all of her cabinet, potentially leaving Thailand in a political vacuum. |
The ruling comes after months of political deadlock in the country. | The ruling comes after months of political deadlock in the country. |
Anti-government protesters have been trying to force Ms Yingluck from office since November 2013. | Anti-government protesters have been trying to force Ms Yingluck from office since November 2013. |
She called a snap general election in February that her party - which has a strong rural support base - was widely expected to win. But the protesters disrupted the polls and the election was later annulled. | |
Ms Yingluck's supporters believe that the courts are biased against her and side with the urban elite at the heart of the protest movement. | Ms Yingluck's supporters believe that the courts are biased against her and side with the urban elite at the heart of the protest movement. |
More protests? | |
On Tuesday, the prime minister appeared in court to defend herself against allegations that she improperly transferred national security chief Thawil Pliensri in 2011. | On Tuesday, the prime minister appeared in court to defend herself against allegations that she improperly transferred national security chief Thawil Pliensri in 2011. |
He has since been reinstated, although he was originally appointed by the previous administration and has been openly critical of Ms Yingluck's government. | He has since been reinstated, although he was originally appointed by the previous administration and has been openly critical of Ms Yingluck's government. |
"I deny the allegation... I didn't violate any laws, I didn't receive any benefit from the appointment," Ms Yingluck said. | "I deny the allegation... I didn't violate any laws, I didn't receive any benefit from the appointment," Ms Yingluck said. |
If the court rules against her, she will face a five-year ban from politics. If that happened, she would be replaced by a deputy prime minister from her caretaker cabinet. | |
The court could also rule against her cabinet, however, leaving Thailand without a government and forcing the appointment of an interim prime minister, a scenario that the protesters have sought. | |
But government supporters have warned that such a move would lead to them launching their own protest movement, raising the risk of intensified political conflict. | But government supporters have warned that such a move would lead to them launching their own protest movement, raising the risk of intensified political conflict. |
Thailand has faced an ongoing power struggle since Ms Yingluck's brother, Thaksin Shinawatra, was ousted by the military as prime minister in a 2006 coup. | |
Mr Thaksin and his family are hated by an urban and middle-class elite who accuse them of corruption and abuse of power. | |
But Mr Thaksin's policies won him huge support in rural areas, and both the elections since the coup have returned Thaksin-allied governments to power. | |
Court rulings have in the past been a key factor amid political turbulence in Thailand. | |
In December 2008, a government of Mr Thaksin's allies fell from power after a court disbanded their political party for electoral fraud, allowing the opposition to form a government. |