Bangkok Post

Failure of Alpha probe

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One of the worst and most costly fraud cases in recent memory was wrongly declared over last week. The National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) brought its investigat­ion of the purchase of Alpha-6 fake narcotics detectors to a close. Astounding­ly, this relatively simple case took the self-styled graft busters 10 years to conclude. The announceme­nt that formally closed the books on the case echoed the supreme failure to tackle the case forthright­ly, investigat­e honestly, act transparen­tly and, finally, identify and bring accountabi­lity and the law to bear on those responsibl­e.

The winding up the Alpha-6 investigat­ion was little more than farce. According to the final report, three previously obscure officials in the office of the Phitsanulo­k governor were responsibl­e for the fraud and its fallout. They had been assigned to buy Alpha-6 “narcotics detectors” in 2008. According to the hugely flawed NACC probe, the three members are responsibl­e for an inflated price quote and for purchasing without the correct paperwork.

In fact, everything about the “drug detectors” was a scam. British con men convinced Thai officials, including some at the very highest positions, that empty plastic boxes with an aerial could not just detect illicit drugs but tell the operator what sort of drugs were involved. In the end, the interior ministry, police and others handed 350 million baht to the scammers in return for 493 of the worthless boxes. Far from the NACC claim that the probably bewildered Phitsanulo­k province officials paid inflated prices, the truth is that the whole consignmen­t wasn’t worth one baht.

A similar con game was worked on the armed forces. The scammers convinced, among others, then-army commander Gen Anupong Paojinda — now Minister of Interior — that different plastic “black boxes” could magically detect explosives. In addition to costs of more than one billion baht, this huge error on the purchase of GT-200 “bomb detectors” by the armed forces, including current Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha, cost more than treasure. It cost lives.

Soldiers in the deep South were ordered to get rid of drugsniffi­ng dogs and to stop using their intuition to intercept explosives and would-be bombers. Commanders put full faith in the GT-200 fake detectors. There were deaths and injuries caused by false-negative readings — when the GT-200 wrongly stated the inspected area was clear of explosives when it was not.

Astounding­ly, men at the very top of the military, police and anti-drug units continued to use the fake detectors long after Thai and foreign scientists proved beyond doubt they were fake. In an infamous 2012 test, this newspaper’s military reporter guessed more containers with real explosives than the so-called bomb detector. Still, then-army chief Gen Prayut, with no evidence whatsoever, told the media, “I affirm that the device is still effective.” The GT-200, he said correctly and tragically, was also being used by other countries.

NACC secretary-general Worawit Sukboon said last week that the commission has filed criminal charges against the three hapless Phitsanulo­k officials. This is a total failure of its mission by the NACC. For 10 years until now, it has refused to investigat­e rumours, evidence and indication­s that the real corruption in the Alpha-6 case extended far up the chain in the Thaksin Shinawatra government and the 2006-2007 military regime. The same is true, in spades, for the GT-200 fraud.

The disappoint­ing and unsatisfac­tory outcome of this astounding­ly long investigat­ion shows up the enormous failings of the anti-graft commission. An outgrowth of the action-packed 1997 “people’s constituti­on”, the NACC is supposed to be an aggressive, independen­t protector of the Thai people against criminal or incompeten­t conduct by officials, no matter how high-ranking. There are so many indication­s of massive graft in the Alpha-6 and GT-200 scams that it is a wonder the NACC found ways to pretend to ignore them.

In fact, everything about the ‘drug detectors’ was a scam.

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