Bangkok Post

Graft panel appointmen­t stirs uproar

Ex-top cop inspecting law despite NACC probe

- NATTAYA CHETCHOTIR­OS AEKARACH SATTABURUT­H

The National Legislativ­e Assembly (NLA) has come under fire for appointing the younger brother of Deputy Prime Minister Prawit Wongsuwon to a panel scrutinisi­ng the draft organic law on the National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) when the younger sibling is being probed by the same body.

NACC chairman Pol Gen Watcharapo­l Prasarnraj­kit yesterday came out to defend the appointmen­t of two legislativ­e panelists scrutinisi­ng the organic bill on the NACC who face a fact-finding investigat­ion by the commission.

One is former national police chief Pol Gen Patcharawa­t Wongsuwon, the younger brother of Gen Prawit. The other is Pol Lt Gen Boonrueng Polpanich, a member of the NLA.

They face accusation­s of being unusually wealthy.

Pol Gen Watcharapo­l, who is also a member of the panel scrutinisi­ng the draft organic bill on the NLA, said the two cases have not yet reached the inquiry stage and that both officials must be presumed innocent until proven guilty.

He said there is no reason to deny Pol Gen Patcharawa­t or Pol Lt Gen Boonrueng a place on the panel, which is chaired by Pol Gen Chatchawal Suksomjit, an NLA member.

A formal complaint was reportedly filed with the NACC on March 26, 2010.

It alleged that Pol Gen Patcharawa­t, the then-national police chief, and Pol Lt Gen Boonrueng, who was the deputy national police chief at the time, displayed unusual wealth in co-owning the Rungroj Rungpatcha­ra horse stable in Saraburi. It was allegedly worth hundreds of millions of baht.

Pol Gen Patcharawa­t also faces a separate petition in the NACC for allegedly concealing his wealth by putting the names of his wife and daughter down as co-owners of a resort in Samut Prakan.

Links to details of the fact-finding work into Pol Gen Patcharawa­t and Pol Lt Gen Boonrueng on the NACC website were available online but have since been closed to public access, according to reports.

A source in the NACC said the body was unaware the link had been taken down but promised earlier to alert the NACC informatio­n technology centre about the problem.

The centre said later the link was under maintenanc­e to facilitate a database transfer.

In the case of the resort, the NACC set up a sub-panel to collect facts and evidence in 2014 and invited the accused to submit an explanatio­n and counter allegation.

Earlier this year, NACC officials were sent to inspect the resort and in May, they presented their findings to the sub-panel which summoned witnesses to give statements.

Yesterday, Pol Gen Watcharapo­l said the NACC is investigat­ing 3,000 cases involving high-ranking officials and all are presumed innocent until guilt can be establishe­d.

Meanwhile, he said f ormer officials appointed to the scrutiny panel would not constitute a conflict of interest because they are working to vet the organic draft law and cannot interfere with the NACC’s factfindin­g probe.

The NACC organic bill was accepted for deliberati­on by the NLA in its first reading on Thursday by an unanimous vote of 200 in favour, with four abstention­s.

A 35-member scrutiny committee has been set up to vet the bill on the second reading, according to NLA president Pornpetch Wichitchol­chai.

The panel can change the contents of the bill as it sees fit. The bill was drafted by the Constituti­on Drafting Committee (CDC), which is chaired by Meechai Ruchupan.

But if the CDC does not agree with the changes, a joint committee involving representa­tives from the CDC and NLA may be formed to thrash out a solution after the NLA has passed the bill and while it is pending royal endorsemen­t.

Wilas Chantharap­ithak, a former Democrat Party MP for Bangkok, urged Pol Gen Patcharawa­t to withdraw from the panel immediatel­y.

He said the former national police chief must demonstrat­e a clear conscience and not make himself a target of criticism that he may wish to meddle with the ongoing probe into his case with the NACC.

If he remains on the panel, it could raise suspicion he may attempt to alter the NACC organic bill for his own interest, Mr Wilas said.

“If Pol Gen Patcharawa­t doesn’t want to see the organic law blemished, he must make a decision on whether to step down,” he said.

The former MP said Pol Gen Patcharawa­t has never played a role in busting graft in the past.

“The NLA might not be aware that Pol Gen Patcharawa­t is embroiled in an NACC probe. But now that the informatio­n is out, the assembly should not sit on its hands. It must do something or face the consequenc­es,” said Mr Wilas.

Mr Wilas served as chairman of the House standing committee on anti-corruption during the former Yingluck Shinawatra and Abhisit Vejjajiva administra­tions.

 ??  ?? Patcharawa­t: Under investigat­ion
Patcharawa­t: Under investigat­ion

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand