No Govt intervention in Thaksin's return case

The government would not intervene in the Constitution Tribunal's consideration if deposed premier Thaksin Shinawatra returns to the country to testify in the party dissolution case, Prime Minister Surayud Chulanont said Friday.
"The court has full authority to decide on the case," he said. "The government, as the administrative branch, has no power to be involved with it." However, Surayud said the judges were welcome to discuss the issue with him, but he would not tell them what to do, he added. Council for National Security (CNS) chief Gen Sonthi Boonyaratglin said Thursday that Thaksin should be the last witness to be called in the party dissolution case if he has to return to the country to testify, because the country had to be put in order first. Thaksin's Thai Rak Thai Party has listed him as its first witness to testify in the trial for alleged electoral fraud. A government source said Thaksin was playing a "return" card only to shake the stability of the CNS and the government, adding that he did not have any plans to return to the country as he feared being prosecuted and arrested. The Thai Rak Thai's chief defence lawyer Pongthep Thepkanchana insisted that Thaksin was the best person to defend the innocence of the party, as he was the Thai Rak Thai leader when the party was charged with electoral frauds. The Nation
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