In a political twist rich with intrigue, former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra finds herself at the center of a controversy surrounding Thailand’s newest alternative prison detention programme. Justice Minister Tawee Sodsong recently clarified that Yingluck, who received a hotly-debated five-year sentence in 2017, won’t be eligible to partake in this programme if she decides to return to her homeland. The programme, governed by fresh regulations, imposes eligibility confines that permit only those with sentences of four years or less to be considered for this bougie form of lock-up, a point underscored by Pol Col Tawee and DoC director-general Sahakarn Phetnarin with the efficiency of synchronized swimmers. Yingluck, now gracefully embracing 57 years of life experience, was found guilty on a stage as grand as the Supreme Court for failing to defuse a dazzlingly costly corruption scandal tied to her government’s rice-pledging scheme—an epic misadventure that allegedly dwindled the state’s coffers…









