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BANGKOK, Thailand -- A Supreme Court sentenced fugitive former Prime
	Minister Yingluck Shinawatra to five years in prison on September 27
	after ruling in absentia she was guilty of negligence for not stopping
	alleged corruption costing billions of dollars during her failed rice
	crop subsidies.
	   The military junta, which ousted Ms. Yingluck in a bloodless 2014
	coup, is now using "spies" to track her after she missed a court
	ruling on August 25 and reportedly smuggled herself out of Thailand
	with the help of police, decoy cars and a black surgical face mask.
	   Ms. Yingluck, 50, has not been seen in public since.
	   "She has not yet applied for political asylum and I don't know
	whether she will be able to get it," coup-installed Prime Minister
	Prayuth Chan-ocha told reporters on September 26 amid speculation that
	Ms. Yingluck was trying for asylum in England.
	   "I know [her whereabouts]...I have spies," said Mr. Prayuth who led
	the 2014 coup when he was army chief.
	   Before disappearing, she insisted on her innocence and portrayed
	herself as a political victim.
	   To "compensate" the government for part of the multi-billion dollar
	losses caused by her rice subsidies, the junta recently froze about $1
	billion of her assets.
	   She forfeited an additional $1 million in bail when she fled.
	   Ms. Yingluck reportedly joined her wealthy brother former Prime
	Minister Thaksin Shinawatra who is living out a similar fate after
	being toppled by the military in a 2006 coup in which Mr. Prayuth also
	participated.
	   Mr. Thaksin is currently dodging a two-year prison sentence for a
	corrupt real estate deal involving his now-divorced wife.
	   The Supreme Court's Criminal Division for Holders of Political
	Positions did not find Ms. Yingluck guilty of corruption but instead
	for failing to stop alleged corruption by others, including rice
	millers, warehouse operators, rice traders and her own government
	officials.
	   Ms. Yingluck's government bought Thai farmers' rice crops when
	international prices were low and stockpiled it in massive warehouses.
	   She promised to pay the farmers much higher prices, amid
	expectation that worldwide prices would rise due to shortages caused
	by Thailand's rice not appearing on the market.
	   But international prices continued to go down and her government
	suffered huge losses.
	   One of the subsidies' fake deals involved former Commerce Minister
	Boonsong Teriyapirom who received a 42-year prison sentence for a
	"government-to-government" rice deal reportedly between Thailand and
	China which did not exist.
	   Money went missing amid allegations that Thais pretended to
	represent Chinese officials.
	   Mr. Boonsong was sentenced on August 25 when the court was
	scheduled to also announce Ms. Yingluck's verdict.
	   After Ms. Yingluck ditched her appearance, the court postponed her
	verdict until September 27.
	   The National Anti-Corruption Commission along with opposition
	politicians, academics, local media and others repeatedly warned Ms.
	Yingluck during her 2011-14 administration that her rice subsidies
	were riddled with alleged theft, fake receipts, false inventory,
	bribery and other expensive flaws.
	   "Importantly, there had been corruption in every step of the
	price-pledging [subsidies] program," said the court in an
	English-language summary.
	   "Members of the House of Representatives, scholars, press and
	public had sent letters, debated and provided opinion about corruption
	about every step of the rice-pledging program," it said.
	   Ms. Yingluck was deemed guilty of negligence -- also described as
	malfeasance and dereliction of duty -- for knowingly ignoring those
	warnings, the court said.
	   Her punishment was Thailand's first case under a recently crafted
	law which could have resulted in 10 years imprisonment.
	   "The defendant should have designated reasonable and effective
	regulations that could concretely prevent loss from the beginning of
	the program."
	   Instead, Ms. Yingluck did "the contrary."
	   Her actions contributed "to huge loss to farmers, the state budget,
	Ministry of Finance, the country and the people," the court said.
	   Supporters who boosted Ms. Yingluck, her brother and their
	candidates to power are now scrambling to decide if they should
	continue following the guidance of the Shinawatra siblings while they
	remain in self-exile, or find new local leaders who can oppose the
	well-entrenched military government.