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Search Result for “rice-pledging scheme”

Showing 1 - 6 of 6

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OPINION

Anti-populism law not for greater good

News, Surasak Glahan, Published on 09/05/2018

» Raising one finger during her campaigning to symbolise her party's ballot number ahead of the 2011 election, Yingluck Shinawatra rode a wave of popularity all the way to victory. And now the man who threw her caretaker government out of office in 2014 by force has demonstrated he is not shy of using a similar gimmick.

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OPINION

Shall we bend the law to keep politicians honest?

News, Surasak Glahan, Published on 25/10/2017

» In the Land of Smiles where the judiciary has increasingly been a channel widely sought to settle political conflicts and end political cases, one minority judge's ruling on the case against ousted premier Yingluck Shinawatra reminds us how far we can go when it comes to criminal prosecution, or to put it in laymen's terms, putting someone in prison.

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OPINION

Moving on from the great escape

News, Surasak Glahan, Published on 25/09/2017

» If it hadn't happened in Thailand but in some other country, many of us in the media might have seen the Yingluck Shinawatra escape from a different angle.

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OPINION

Prosecuting a country's 'CEO' a risky move

News, Surasak Glahan, Published on 27/07/2017

» Should chief executive officers (CEOs) who inflict losses on companies be jailed for mismanagement and then be forced to compensate the firms? If so, national leaders -- like ousted premier Yingluck Shinawatra who is undergoing a criminal trial for implementing the supposedly loss-ridden rice-pledging scheme -- could face the same prospect of punishment for a flawed project.

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OPINION

Politicising rice can be a worthy cause

News, Surasak Glahan, Published on 10/11/2016

» The regime's responses to plummeting rice prices have been both disappointing and disastrous to it and farmers.

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OPINION

Does Yingluck punishment fit the crime?

News, Surasak Glahan, Published on 16/09/2016

» Both are the first female national leaders similarly alleged to have committed fiscal crimes of responsibility. They, however, faced the music of a different tune.