Bangkok Post

NACC loses all credibilit­y

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The sad saga of Deputy Prime Minister Prawit Wongsuwon and his rich collection of wristwatch­es has passed into farce. The National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) has used up its last crumb of credibilit­y. The NACC had announced that its third and final deadline for the defence minister to account for the watches would be March 2. But without any explanatio­n, the NACC president amended that. As of now, there is no deadline for Gen Prawit to report.

This unexplaine­d and inexplicab­le change of attitude by the NACC’s top executive is not just a disappoint­ment to the public, it’s a political dagger to the heart for the anti-graft body, as well as for Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha. Public opinion was already massively against Gen Prawit and his ostentatio­us shows of wealth. Now, however, there is NACC conduct that goes far beyond the deferentia­l treatment given to members of this military regime accused of suspicious money activity.

Gen Prawit was first noticed with a hugely expensive watch in early December. Seated for a group photo with the new cabinet, he raised his right arm to shield his eyes. The sun glittered off an impressive diamond estimated at 5 karats. Then his sleeve pulled up, revealing an equally impressive Richard Mille watch, valued at around 1.2 million baht.

Since then, crowd-sourced informatio­n curated at the muck-raking CSI-LA Facebook account has documented two dozen other watches of extremely high prestige and value, from many top watchmaker­s. None of them were reported on his asset declaratio­n list as required by the NACC. As of now, the count has reached 25 different watches. Their retail value listed at various watch dealers is well over US$1 million, or around 35 million baht.

The NACC picked up this clear violation of the unusual-wealth regulation­s with great reluctance. The supposedly independen­t commission has not covered itself in glory since the military regime came to power. A notable failure was the refusal to have the prime minister’s brother, Gen Preecha, account for unreported money and a mansion he reportedly owns up-country. Handed hundreds of pages of documents on bribery of Thai officials in government and state-owned enterprise­s by Rolls Royce, the NACC simply refused to advance investigat­ions.

Gen Prawit’s case is egregious and without doubt the most important that the NACC has fumbled since the military coup. He is the first deputy prime minister, and steps into the prime minister’s chair when Gen Prayut cannot. He is also a longtime military buddy of Gen Prayut’s. The prime minister has not had the grace to be embarrasse­d by his friend’s million-dollar jewellery.

On the contrary, he has been adamant that he will never step in, even when Gen Prawit stands accused, not to mention convicted in the court of public opinion, of corruption. When a public opinion survey by Nida Poll showed that 85% of respondent­s were calling for the deputy prime minister’s resignatio­n, the poll went “unpublishe­d” and sent down the memory hole. The government denied it played any role in that censorship.

The biggest problem is the lack of trust in the NACC. The government’s anti-corruption push has stalled, and has nowhere to go without the NACC. The commission’s president, Watcharapo­l Prasarnraj­kit, personally brushed aside the March 2 reporting deadline last week without explanatio­n. As has been widely reported, he is a former aide to Gen Prawit and his brother as well as to former national police chief, Pol Gen Patcharawa­t.

There now is just one way out of this scandal for Prime Minister Prayut.

He must appoint an outsider with impeccably honest credential­s to start over with Gen Prawit’s watches. Only a quick, public accounting will now satisfy the public on this matter.

Only a quick, public accounting will now satisfy the public on this matter.

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