Bangkok Post

‘I was framed,’ school chief swears

Director says angry parents made up ‘tea money’ case

- DUMRONGKIA­T MALA AEKARACH SATTABURUT­H

The director of a school accused of demanding 400,000 baht in “tea money” from a parent in exchange for enrolling a student has denied the allegation, claiming he is the victim of a plot to oust him by disgruntle­d alumni whose children were not admitted to the school.

Samsenwitt­ayalai School director Viroj Samluan described it as a “well-organised plot”.

The case first drew the attention of the media after one parent circulated a video clip allegedly showing the school director receiving money for accepting his child into Mathayom 1 (7th Grade).

The clip showed a parent, whose name has not been disclosed, placing a brown envelope filled with cash on a table in what was claimed to be Mr Viroj’s office.

The parent allegedly recorded every contact with the school director, including phone calls and the handover of the purported bribe. The director was said to have had his deputy accept the cash on his behalf.

The parent said the cash was a bribe and that the video footage was made public to get the permanent secretary for education to look into the issue.

At a press conference yesterday, Mr Viroj insisted he had never sold enrollment­s.

He said the student in question was admitted on April 5 while the video showing the alleged “tea money” was shot two weeks later on April 19.

The student was one of sixty who enrolled in Mathayom 1 this year under special conditions made available to the school’s land donors, benefactor­s, the children of teachers and students from partner schools. Other students had to pass a rigorous test.

“If the student had already been admitted, there was no need to pay any tea money. Moreover, why was the clip not circulated immediatel­y ... but rather delayed until June?” Mr Viroj asked.

He said he believes he may be the victim of a conspiracy by a group of school alumni who were upset their children could not get into the school.

He said these alumni had requested the school secure seats for their children in Mathayom 1 and Mathayom 4 (Grade 10) every year, but that the school could not “help” all of the students.

He said the video was a “set-up” aimed at blackmaili­ng him into compliance.

Mr Viroj also lodged a complaint with Bang Sue police station yesterday, filing a defamation suit against the parent who released the clip.

“Under school regulation­s, parents cannot donate money before the announceme­nt of the entrance exam results, and every time the school receives a donation we must give donors a receipt as a record — so the bribe never took place,” he said.

In a statement, Samsenwitt­ayalai Alumni Associatio­n said the scandal has hurt the school’s reputation. It urged the Education Ministry to investigat­e the issue.

On Monday, the Office of the Basic Education Commission (Obec) set up a fact-finding panel and sent its legal experts to look into the case.

Obec secretary-general Karun Sakulpradi­t said the director will be transferre­d and face disciplina­ry action if the allegation­s are confirmed.

Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha said he ordered the Education Ministry to clear the matter up. “I insist we should not have any more ‘tea money’ incidents,” he said. “More importantl­y, we have to ensure all schools have the same standards.”

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