Yingluck Shinawatra, also known as Pu, is a Thai politician and businesswoman
@Business Women, Facts and Personal Life
Yingluck Shinawatra, also known as Pu, is a Thai politician and businesswoman
Yingluck Shinawatra born at
Yingluck has always been a private person and kept her personal life under the wraps.
With her elder brother Thaksin’s growing influence in the political circuit, it became easier for Yingluck to rule the family business while her brother was busy running the country.
She got married in 1995 to Anusorn Amorchat, a Thai businessman. He is an executive of the Charoen Pokphand Group. Presently, he is in charge of M-Link Asia Corporation that sells mobile phones and its accessories. Together they have a son named Supasek.
Yingluck Shinawatra was born on June 21, 1967 in Chiang Mai, Thailand. She is the youngest of the nine children born to Loet Shinawatra and Yindi Ramingwong.
Yingluck’s father was a successful businessman and a Member of the Parliament for the northern city of Chiang Mai from late 1960s till the end of 1970s and through her maternal side, she is a descendant of a former monarch of Chiang Mai.
She completed her lower secondary education from Regina Coeli College, a private girls' school, and then went to Yupparaj College for higher secondary. She went to Chiang Mai University from where she graduated with a BA degree from the Faculty of Political Science and Public Administration in 1988. Then she got her master’s degree in Management Information Systems from Kentucky State University in Frankfort in 1991.
In 1993, she started her career in a telephone directory business named Shinawatra Directories Co. Ltd where she worked as a sales and marketing intern. With her sheer dedication and hard work, she reached a position of influence. Her responsibilities kept on increasing within the business and soon she became the director of procurement and the director of operations.
She then became the General Manager of Rainbow Media in 1994, which was a subsidiary of International Broadcasting Corporation. In 2002, she left IBC as the Deputy CEO. Later she took the position of an executive in her brother’s company ‘Advanced Info Service’ (AIS), the third largest telecommunication firm in the country.
However, when in a controversial business transaction ‘Shin Corporation’, the parent company of AIS was sold out to a Singapore-based conglomerate ‘Temasek Holdings’ at a huge profit margin in 2006, Yingluck resigned from AIS. She continued working as a Managing Director of SC Asset Co Ltd, the family's real estate company.
The political scenario in Thailand around this time was shaky, to say the least. The People’s Power Party, which had come to power after the dissolution of Thai Rak Thai Party in 2006, was in shambles and about to fall apart. Yingluck’s brother, Thaksin was in power in the erstwhile government. With the end of People's Power Party emerged the need to form a new political party. It was then that the former People's Power Party MPs came forward and formed the 'Pheu Thai Party' in the latter half of 2008.
After a brief turmoil about who should be the leader of the party, Yingluck was elected to be the face of the party. This was partly because she has always had the support of the veteran politician Chalerm Yubamrung. The Parliamentary Elections were declared soon afterwards and Yingluck decided to run for the Office of the Prime Minister.
Yingluck, being a fresh face in the political circuit, and also belonging to a family with political pedigree, won the polls with an absolute majority. Her win is marked as a remarkable event in the pages of Thailand’s history. Thailand got her first female Prime Minister ever on 5th August in 2011.
Although the exit polls had predicted the Pheu Thai Party to win 310 seats out of the 500-seat in the parliament, the official result saw a win of the party with 265 seats and 47 percent of the vote, accounting to a 75.03 percent election turnout rate. This was only the second time that any single party won with more than half the seats in parliament after 2005.
The 28th Prime Minister of Thailand received a warm welcome from United Nations secretary-general Ban Ki-moon who addressed the different parties and asked them to respect the people’s decision. Aung San Su Kyi, the State Counselor of Myanmar also embraced Yingluck’s win and spoke about making the relationship between Myanmar and Thailand better.