Thaksin Shinawatra Released From Bangkok Prison
Former Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra walked out of Klong Prem Central Prison in Bangkok on Monday morning after serving eight months of a one-year sentence for corruption-related offences. ย Thaksin Shinawatras release from Klong Prem Central Prison was, on Monday morning. The 76-year-old billionaire was released on parole and greeted by approximately 300 supporters, family members, and political allies. His release closes the latest chapter of a legal saga that has defined โ and destabilised โ Thai politics for two decades.
Thaksin left the prison at around 7:40am local time wearing a white polo shirt and blue trousers. He was wearing a white polo shirt and blue trousers. He embraced his family, smiled at the gathered crowd, and accepted red roses from supporters who chanted “We love Thaksin,” before departing without addressing reporters, the Associated Press reported. WSLS 10 NewsABC News
About an hour later, in a video streamed by the Thairath news outlet, Thaksin was seen rolling down the car window to greet a small group of supporters waiting outside his home in western Bangkok, telling reporters who shouted questions at him that “I was in hibernation; I can’t remember anything now.” Al Jazeera
A Justice Ministry panel agreed last month to grant him parole as part of a review of more than 900 eligible prisoners’ cases, citing his good behaviour in prison, his age, and the low risk that he would repeat his offence. ABC News
According to the corrections department, Thaksin will be required to wear an electronic ankle monitor for the remainder of his sentence. The Associated Press reported that he must also reside at his declared Bangkok home and report regularly to probation officials throughout a four-month probation period. Al Jazeera
The Charges and the Hospital Controversy
Thaksin was charged with abuse of power over allegations including using his position to benefit his own business interests and illegally approving a state lottery project that caused losses to the government. He was convicted in absentia but returned to Thailand in 2023 to be sentenced as the Pheu Thai Party, his most recent political vehicle, formed a government. ABC News
After returning to Thailand in August 2023, he was sentenced to eight years for corruption and abuse of power. He was then whisked to a private room in hospital on health grounds, his sentence was reduced to one year by royal pardon, and he was freed as part of an early release scheme for elderly prisoners. Free Malaysia Today
That arrangement drew immediate public scrutiny. The timing of his return and his medical transfer, which coincided with Pheu Thai forming a new government, fuelled public suspicion of a backroom deal and allegations of special treatment. Free Malaysia Today
In September last year, the Supreme Court ruled that Thaksin must serve that time in prison, concluding that he and his doctors had intentionally prolonged his hospital stay with minor surgeries that were unnecessary. He began his prison sentence at Klong Prem Central Prison in September 2025. Al Jazeera
A Dynasty Under Pressure
Thaksin’s release comes at a moment of unusual political weakness for the Shinawatra family. His influence has waned of late following his jailing and his once formidable Pheu Thai Party’s worst election performance on record earlier this year. The Japan Times
Thaksin’s daughter Paetongtarn Shinawatra became the country’s youngest prime minister in 2024 but was removed from office by the Constitutional Court in August 2025 after a recording was released of a compromising phone call with former Cambodian leader Hun Sen. Her dismissal came weeks before her father’s imprisonment began. ABC News
Thaksin’s Pheu Thai Party, which slipped to third place in February’s elections, joined the governing coalition of conservative Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul. Thaksin’s nephew, Yodchanan Wongsawat, who became Pheu Thai’s standard-bearer ahead of the February election, was made minister of higher education in Anutin’s cabinet. Al JazeeraAl Jazeera
The party’s fall to third place represents a stark reversal of fortune for a political machine that once commanded landslide majorities and survived multiple coups and court-ordered dissolutions.
Background
Thaksin was a telecommunications magnate who founded his own political party in 1998 and served as prime minister from 2001 until a military coup ousted him in 2006 while he was abroad. His ouster triggered nearly two decades of deep and sometimes violent political polarisation, while his political machine staged several comebacks even as Thaksin himself remained in self-imposed exile to escape what he said was political persecution through the courts. ABC News
He was the first elected prime minister in Thai history to serve a full four-year term. Policies like a national healthcare scheme and projects to build roads in less developed parts of the country drew devoted support from the poorer segments of society, particularly in the rural north and northeast, but his popularity and sometimes high-handed style created deep fractures between his base and the country’s urban elites, royalists, and military. ABC News
Regional and Political Impact
Thaksin’s release puts one of Southeast Asia’s most polarising political figures back in public circulation at a time when his party holds no leading role in government. Analysts and observers will watch whether his presence energises a diminished Pheu Thai or deepens divisions within it.
Thaksin remade and dominated Thai politics for a quarter-century. His reduced standing โ paroled, ankle-monitored, and politically sidelined โ marks a significant shift in a country where his name alone was once enough to win elections. Whether he can reassert influence from outside any formal position, or whether the family’s grip on Thai progressive politics has permanently loosened, remains the central question of the country’s post-election landscape. Al Jazeera
What Happens Next
After his release, Thaksin will be on probation for four months, during which he must reside at his declared home in Bangkok, wear an electronic monitoring bracelet, and report regularly to probation officials. ABC News
Pheu Thai, now a junior partner in Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul’s coalition, faces the challenge of rebuilding its electoral standing ahead of the next general election cycle. They need to make their party stronger before the next big election. Thaksin’s public role, if any, during his probation period will be constrained by his monitoring conditions. No formal statement on his political plans has been issued by him or his party.



