Bangkok Post

Former top monk ‘on the run’ in Laos

Police seek extraditio­n over temple funds saga

- WASSAYOS NGAMKHAM

Police are seeking the extraditio­n of former Sangha Supreme Council (SSC) member Phra Phrom Methee who reportedly fled to Laos after avoiding arrest over the temple funds embezzleme­nt scandal.

The former senior monk, 77, who was also governor of the 4th-7th ecclesiast­ical regions, is wanted under an arrest warrant for alleged involvemen­t in embezzleme­nt, malfeasanc­e and money laundering.

National police chief Pol Gen Chakthip Chaijinda led investigat­ors from the Crime Suppressio­n Division, the Metropolit­an Police Bureau and the Immigratio­n Bureau to the northeaste­rn province of Nakhon Phanom yesterday after learning that Phra Phrom Methee, assistant abbot of Wat Samphantha­wong in Bangkok, had crossed the border there to Laos.

A police source said Phra Phrom Methee was attending an event in Phitsanulo­k on May 24 when police raided three temples in Bangkok and arrested five senior monks, including Sangha Supreme councillor­s, for alleged involvemen­t in the embezzleme­nt of state temple developmen­t funds.

On learning of the arrests, Phra Phrom Me thee travel led to Nakh on Ph an om instead of returning to Wat Samphantha­wong.

He travelled in a chauffeur-driven black van owned by a well-to-do woman follower to Wat Pa Sukhonthar­ak in Renu Nakhon district of Nakhon Phanom.

There the lady contacted a Lao woman, who was also a follower of Phra Phrom Methee, to arrange his escape across the Mekong River to Laos. The Lao woman was in Thakhek, the capital of Khammouane province, the source said.

The source said Phra Phrom Methee has now left Khammouane for Vientiane after learning that police were stepping up their hunt for him.

Pol Gen Chakthip was discussing the former senior monk’s extraditio­n with Lao authoritie­s, the source said. According to the source, Phra Phrom Methee had expected the legal action long before the raids and had told his followers that he was not worried because he had many followers in Laos who were ready to look after him.

Phra Phrom Methee is one of seven monks who had their monastic ranks revoked by His Majesty the King in the wake of the scandal under a royal command published in the Royal Gazette on Wednesday.

The scandal involves millions of baht that were siphoned from funds for temple developmen­t and Buddhist studies allocated by the National Office of Buddhism (NOB).

Some NOB officials, monks and laymen are among the suspects.

According to investigat­ors, the officials contacted temple abbots to propose funding for projects and demanded kickbacks from them.

The abbots were expected to give them some “change” in exchange for the funding, the investigat­ors said.

Phra Phrom Methee was also expelled from the SSC along with two others — the former Phra Phrom Sitthi, and the former Phra Phrom Dilok.

The former Phra Phrom Sitthi, formerly the abbot of Wat Sa Ket in Bangkok, surrendere­d to police on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, the former Phra Phrom Dilok, the former abbot of Wat Sam Phraya in Bangkok, was arrested during last Thursday’s police raids on three Buddhist temples in Bangkok.

The pair were defrocked and are now incarcerat­ed at Bangkok Remand Prison.

Last Thursday police also arrested activist monk Phra Buddha Isara at Wat Or Noi in Nakhon Pathom province.

He was charged with running an illegal secret society and using royal seals without permission.

The source said police were also seeking warrants for the arrest of a couple who own a shop selling religious supplies in Nonthaburi’s Bang Kruai district after an examinatio­n of the money trail found the “suspicious” transfer of about 3 million baht from a bank account belong to Wat Sam Phraya to the shop.

The same source said police would also seek arrest warrants for the Thai woman and the Lao national who allegedly helped Phra Phrom Methee flee to Laos.

They will likely face prosecutio­n for aiding criminal suspects on the run, in violation of Section 189 of the Criminal Code. Violators are liable to a jail term of up to two years and/or a fine of up to 4,000 baht.

Krit Krasaethip, the director of Bangkok Remand Prison, said that Thongchai Sukkho, the former Phra Phrom Sitthi, was due to be moved yesterday from the prison’s reception centre to Zone 3 of the facility.

He will stay there with four former Wat Sa Ket assistant abbots who have also been detained there.

The former monk appeared to be handling the situation well despite suffering from allergies and muscle weakness, Mr Krit said.

Meanwhile, Jaroon Wannakasin­anont, leader of a group calling itself the Chao Phut Phalang Phaendin Group (Group of Buddhists Who Are the Power of the Land) lodged a complaint against NOB director Col Pongporn Phramsane with the Crime Suppressio­n Division yesterday for damaging the reputation of monks.

 ??  ?? Phra Phrom Methee: Many Lao followers
Phra Phrom Methee: Many Lao followers

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