The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Thailand top cop charged over scandal-mired royal cycling event

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BANGKOK: A well-known high-ranking Thai police officer who disappeare­d from the public sphere four months ago has been charged with malfeasanc­e, police said yesterday, the latest twist in a shadowy purge of planners behind a birthday parade for the queen.

Former police spokesman Prawut Thavornsir­i was a familiar face who appeared on daily television broadcasts with updates on high profile criminal cases, including the bombing in Bangkok last year that killed 20 people.

He suddenly vacated his post in late October during a probe into another policeman and two others accused of exploiting their connection­s to the monarchy to profit off ‘Bike for Mom’ — a massive cycling event that celebrated Queen Sirikit’s birthday in August.

Those men were charged with defaming the royal family, a broadly interprete­d crime that carries a 15 year jail sentence in a country where palace intrigue is shrouded in secrecy and rumour.

Two of those jailed over the event were later found dead in their prison cells within weeks of each other in November, according to police, a string of events that shocked the public.

Yesterday deputy police chief Sriwarah Rangsitpra­mkul said Prawut, who has not been seen in public since the purge, had also been charged for his involvemen­t in the cycling event, which was led by the 63year-old crown prince.

The former spokesman will be prosecuted for installing antennas on a Bangkok building that were used in connection with the event, he said, without elaboratin­g on what the radio transmitte­rs were used for.

He also confirmed that Prawut had not returned to Thailand.

“General Prawut Thavornsir­i, former national police spokesman, is currently not in the kingdom but it will not affect our summoning him to hear the charges of malfeasanc­e,” said Sriwarah.

'Bike for Mom', which was followed by a similar fanfare for the king in December dubbed 'Bike for Dad', saw Prince Maha Vajiralong­korn lead tens of thousands of cyclists through the streets of the capital to celebrate his parents’ birthdays.

The tightly-choreograp­hed events threw the crown prince into the limelight at a time of heightened concern over the health of his revered father — 88-year-old King Bhumibol Adulyadej.

The widely venerated king’s ailing health is seen as an exacerbati­ng factor behind the country’s decade of political turmoil, which has been pierced by two military coups.

The military has long styled itself as protector of the monarchy. — AFP

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