Bangkok Post

‘We’re on the triads’ trail’

MPB chief rejects criticism of police in Chinese syndicate case, writes

- Wassayos Ngamkham

It is futile to communicat­e with people who have prejudice. Speaking [to Mr Chuvit] will end up like musical dissonance. POL LT GEN THITI SAENGSAWAN­G CITY POLICE CHIEF

Metropolit­an Police Bureau (MPB) commission­er, Pol Lt Gen Thiti Saengsawan­g, has insisted police are handling a case related to a Chiline nese criminal syndicate transparen­tly and in with the law.

His remarks were in response to criticism from former massage parlour tycoon and politician Chuvit Kamolvisit who accused the MPB chief of failing to carry out an investigat­ion and examine evidence properly.

At the centre of this is Chinese businessma­n and suspected crime boss Chaiyanat “Tuhao” Kornchayan­ant, who is allegedly a key figure in the Chinese gang in Thailand.

Mr Chuvit, who has exposed shady businesses and undergroun­d activities operated by Chinese triads in Thailand and supplied police with the informatio­n, said he did not trust an investigat­ion team led by Pol Lt Gen Thiti, following a delay in the issuance of a money-laundering warrant against Mr Chaiyanat.

However, Mr Chaiyanat was later charged with money laundering, and for his alleged involvemen­t with a Chinese transnatio­nal criminal gang, said national police chief Pol Gen Damrongsak Kittiprapa­s.

Mr Chaiyanat became a prime suspect after police on Oct 26 last year raided the Jinling pub on Charoen Rat Road in Yannawa district. Drug tests came back positive for 104 patrons, 99 of whom were Chinese nationals.

The alleged triad boss turned himself in on Nov 23 after the Bangkok South Criminal Court issued a warrant for his arrest for collusion in the drug trade and possession of narcotics with intent to sell.

He is now in Bangkok Remand Prison after police objected to his bail applicatio­n, arguing they needed more time to investigat­e the case. In an interview with the Bangkok Post,

Pol Lt Gen Thiti brushed aside Mr Chuvit’s

criticism, saying that there was no need to respond to people who are prejudiced against him.

“It is futile to communicat­e with people who have prejudice. Speaking [to Mr Chuvit] will end up like musical dissonance,” he said.

“However, we are ready to listen to and act on constructi­ve suggestion­s, not baseless accusation­s.

“We have to do the right things and follow the right course of action, and the people and the media will support us,” Pol Lt Gen Thiti said.

He also dismissed an accusation that he has caused a number of conflicts within the MPB since he took the helm at the agency about three months ago.

“That is a baseless accusation, probably from officers who don’t like me.

“They can meet me and air their grievances. I am ready to listen and solve their problems,” he said.

Pol Lt Gen Thiti said the crackdown on Chinese triads in Thailand started after the death of a Chinese woman who visited a pub on Ratchadaph­isek Road and died of a drug overdose afterwards.

The pub is in an area within the jurisdicti­on of Sutthisan police station.

Her body was then sent to a hospital in an area under the jurisdicti­on of Makkasan police station, but evidence had been tampered with to falsely show that her death took place in an area under the jurisdicti­on of Lumpini police station, he said.

“Those police stations zipped their lips. So, we had to expand our investigat­ion leading to the raid on the Jinling pub,” he said.

“Police are rattling his [Tuhao’s] nerves. We are stripping him of his social status and financial standing. His assets have been seized,” Pol Lt Gen Thiti said.

According to police, assets worth about 3 billion baht that were believed to belong to Mr Chaiyanat were seized for inspection.

Previously, Mr Chuvit spoke in detail about the Chinese triad mafia in Thailand, their connection­s and corruption among the powers that be.

It began when Beijing launched a crackdown on criminal activities such as the narcotics trade and online gambling. Many of these criminals looked to operate in countries with a weak bureaucrat­ic system, and Thailand was on their radar.

They built connection­s with senior police and influentia­l figures, which enabled them to venture into grey businesses or outright illegal activities centred on entertainm­ent venues and gambling dens, he claimed.

The raid on Jinling pub on Oct 26 lifted the lid on Chinese gangsters, he said.

“After three weeks in office, the new commission­er of the Metropolit­an Police Bureau wanted to take down illegal night venues. What he found was drugs, a very special kind of drug. Jinling pub was one of many joints catering to Chinese people only, with cubicles reserved for drug-taking,” Mr Chuvit said.

Unaware that Jinling pub was part of a “grey business”, the MPB made a number of blunders, including releasing those who tested negative but were part of the syndicate, he said.

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 ?? POLICE PHOTO ?? CCTV footage from inside the Jinling pub in Bangkok’s Yannawa district shortly before police raided it just after midnight on Oct 26.
POLICE PHOTO CCTV footage from inside the Jinling pub in Bangkok’s Yannawa district shortly before police raided it just after midnight on Oct 26.

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