Bangkok Post

Police hit with false arrest reports probe

- ACHADTAYA CHUENNIRAN PENCHAN CHAROENSUT­HIPAN

The Royal Thai Police (RTP) has set up a panel to look into accusation­s that Phuket police officers failed to report the arrests of more than 1,700 foreigners over the last year to the Immigratio­n Bureau to help prevent them from being deported.

According to figures supplied by the RTP, a total of 2,415 foreigners were arrested in Phuket over the past year. Only 685 were sent to the Immigratio­n Bureau for deportatio­n while 1,730 were not raising suspicions they may have been bribed not to do so.

Phuket police chief Pol Maj Gen Thirapol Thipcharoe­n said deputy national police chief Pol Gen Srivara Ransibrahm­anakul had ordered an investigat­ion into allegation­s that some police stations in Phuket had doctored the number of foreigners who had committed offences in Phuket.

Pol Gen Srivara told reporters earlier that 68 police officers were allegedly involved in the misconduct.

Local police are required to send all foreign offenders they arrest to the bureau for deportatio­n, as well as inform foreign embassies, Pol Maj Gen Thirapol said.

However, in some cases, immigratio­n officers see no need to deport foreigners who commit petty offences, Pol Maj Gen Thirapol said.

Meanwhile, Adul Khiewborib­oon, chairman of a support group for relatives of victims of the 1992 Black May unrest, yesterday claimed he had received informatio­n about police taking bribes in major tourist provinces, including Phuket.

He called on the RTP to tackle the problem and prevent it from ruining the country’s tourism industry.

Two senior Phuket police officials have been transferre­d as the RTP widens its investigat­ion into allegation­s that tourist police have been taking monthly bribes from Thai nationals, foreign tourists and migrant workers in excess of 100 million baht.

Both officials were transferre­d to the headquarte­rs of Provincial Police Region 8 in Surat Thani, according to Pol Gen Wirachai Songmetta, an acting deputy chief of the RTP. The two officers have not been named.

Since the investigat­ion is ongoing, both are considered innocent until proven guilty, Pol Gen Wirachai said in his capacity as spokesman for the RTP.

On Tuesday, Pol Gen Suchat Thirasawas, acting chief of police inspectors, said Thammarat Suwannapho­si, who runs a Facebook page called “Spotlight Phuket”, recently petitioned the Prime Minister’s Office and the office of police inspectors over the alleged bribe-taking.

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