Audio By Carbonatix
Thailand's former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra will be indicted on charges of insulting the monarchy, the country’s attorney-general has said.
The controversial political leader, who returned to Thailand last year after 15 years in exile, is being charged over an interview he gave to a Korean newspaper nine years ago.
He is the most high-profile figure to face charges under Thailand's notorious lese majeste law, which has been used extensively against political dissidents.
Hundreds of people have been charged in the last four years alone.
A huge figure in Thai politics, Mr Thaksin's return to the country last year had appeared to put an end to the bitter political rivalry between his family and the conservative groups who feared his populist style of leadership.
In what had looked like a grand bargain, his party was allowed to form a coalition government with some of his political opponents, to keep out the youthful reformist party Move Forward which had won the most votes and seats in the 2023 election.
But the decision to indict the 74-year-old former premier under the draconian lese majeste law shows that he still has enemies in Thailand’s powerful royalist establishment.
The charges related to an interview he gave to a Korean newspaper in 2015 while he was in exile.
In that article, he had accused the king’s top advisory body, the privy council, of helping engineer the 2014 military coup which deposed an administration led by his sister Yingluck.
Yingluck Shinawatra, elected in the 2011 general election, led Thailand for three years before being ousted by the coup.

The privy council is not technically covered by the lese majeste law, but these days it has been often broadly interpreted to cover any opinion which might reflect negatively on the royal family.
More than 270 people have been charged under the law since mass protests four years ago in which the monarchy was subjected to unprecedented public criticism.
Mr. Thaksin’s lawyers say they are confident of defending him in court; but in the typically protracted period before he is likely to go to trial this indictment may force him to limit his political ambitions.
Latest Stories
-
Church of Pentecost supports over 2,000 BECE candidates in Obuasi with career guidance seminar
28 minutes -
Brandon Asante and Coventry all but promoted to Premier League despite Sheffield Wednesday draw
50 minutes -
GPL 2025/26: Late Kwartemaa strike downs Hearts in Tema
56 minutes -
Ghana Faces Sierra Leone Moment as Prosecutorial Powers come under strain
1 hour -
Don’t consume fish or seafood from Tema Shipyard until further notice – FDA warns
1 hour -
Why volunteering might be Africa’s most underrated career accelerator
1 hour -
ActionAid Ghana raises concern over gender gaps in Feed Ghana Programme
1 hour -
Windstorm wreaks havoc in Gushegu, displacing nearly 2,000 residents and damaging schools
1 hour -
Friends of Bridget Bonnie Marks her 35th birthday with donation to Kasseh Model Health Centre
2 hours -
From Ekumfi Kokodo to the Pulpit Stage: Essi Donkor’s gospel journey takes shape
2 hours -
Landfilling waste management creates no value, it’s an economic waste
3 hours -
Photos: Speaker Bagbin Commissions MPs constituency office under parliamentary decentralisation programme
3 hours -
Black Stars technical advisor Winfried Schäfer sacked as GFA shakes up backroom staff
3 hours -
Wenchi water project almost complete, critical to gov’t agenda – GWL MD
3 hours -
Anti-LGBTQ+ bill not part of government’s legislative agenda – Inusah Fuseini
3 hours