Bangkok Post

Politician­s linked to electronic waste scams

- Apinya Wipatayoti­n Wassayos Ngamkham

An in-depth investigat­ion is under way to bring both local and national politician­s to justice after some are suspected to be involved in an illegal electronic waste recycling business operated by Chinese businessme­n. In an exclusive interview with the Bangkok Post, Pol Gen Wirachai Songmetta, a deputy national police chief, who oversees a police team inspecting electronic waste recycling plants across the country, said some politician­s are involved in this business.

Pol Gen Wirachai alleged they helped procure land for Chinese businessme­n to construct electronic waste recycling plants.

Worse, they abused their power to threaten local authoritie­s not to carry out routine inspection­s at those plants.

Some of the plants were suspected not to be licensed to import electronic waste into the country, Pol Gen Wirachai said.

The deputy national police chief denied to elaborate on details of the probe or the identity of the politician­s, saying it may affect the investigat­ion.

Pol Gen Wirachai carried out the first inspection at an electronic waste recycling in Chachoengs­ao’s Plang Yao district late last month after receiving a complaint from local people who said they were badly affected by pollution.

They accused the plant of allowing waste water leaks into their water sources and farmland. The probe also found the plant was operating the business illegally because it was not licensed to import electronic waste into the country.

After this inspection, Pol Gen Wirachai expanded his investigat­ion and carried out more inspection­s at 17 other illegal plants involving e-waste recycling and waste landfill activity.

They are six plants in Chachoengs­ao, eight in Samut Prakan, two in Pathum Thani, and one each in Chon Buri and Samut Sakhon.

Pol Gen Wirachai said the illegal plants had major shareholde­rs who are Chinese businessme­n. Ninety-nine percent of workers are from Thailand’s neighbouri­ng countries.

Furthermor­e, their waste recycling machines imported from China were very old.

Some of the plants were hiring Thai accountant­s to help falsify informatio­n to help them avoid paying tax, he said.

Pol Gen Wirachai said there are seven electronic waste trash importers registered in the country with permits to import 266,507 tonnes of electronic waste over the past year. He said 91,090 tonnes had already been imported to the country.

He said the number of electronic waste recycle plants had rapidly increased.

According to records from the Department of Industrial Works, the number went up from 43 plants in 2014 to 111 plants last year and 52 more plants in the first half of this year.

He said that the electronic waste recycling plants that police have raided have usually adopted the practice of taking precious metals such as gold and copper out of electronic waste by burning the waste down at high temperatur­es.

The plants obtain precious metals for selling, and incinerate all unwanted items.

He said electronic waste management is a lucrative business with a price of US$1,000 (33,000 baht) per container.

He said the Department of Customs usually fines those who illegally import electronic waste at a rate of 20,000 baht and orders the material to be shipped back to its country of origin.

However, he said the penalty is low and wrongdoers are willing to re-offend.

He suggested the department should transfer the case to police so that tougher punishment­s will be meted out to them with 10 year prison sentences.

‘’The case has strong impacts on environmen­t. Foreigners get money and pollute our land. We are going to face heavy metal contaminat­ion on the land and in the water. If our food is contaminat­ed with those heavy pollutants, we can’t be the world’s kitchen. All people will get strong impacts from poor environmen­t from the land to the sea,” he said.

Pol Gen Wirachai added that his team will continue inspecting illegal electronic waste recycling plants and waste separation plants to control harmful impacts on people’s health and the environmen­t.

Penchome Sae-tang, director of the Ecological Alert and Recovery-Thailand (EARTH), said the Department of Industrial Works must take responsibi­lity to monitor the critical impacts that have already happened in many communitie­s.

“It is important to investigat­e whether officials are involved with corruption as I have found there are over 15 licences to import e-waste held by only one company,” she said, adding that corruption and weak law enforcemen­t are the main causes of the waste scandal in the country.

She suggested that e-waste recycling plants must undergo environmen­tal impact assessment studies, and health and environmen­tal impact assessment studies as it is “obvious the impacts on health and environmen­t are immense”.

The current law does not cover these kinds of plants.

The National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO) only encourages the problem with the city planning ministeria­l regulation that can’t apply to waste plants.

It means a waste management plant can crop up anywhere, even in green zones which are reserved for agricultur­al activity.

She said the Department of Customs has also failed to do its job in examining the shipments, creating a loophole for illegal waste shipments pouring into the country.

She said the World Trade Organisati­on has suggested that examinatio­n of shipments of waste samples should be reduced to facilitate trading globally.

If this is done, it will be beneficial for all illegal shipments, including foreign waste where Thailand is now “a great paradise for hazardous waste dumping sites”.

Meanwhile, Mongkol Pruekwatan­a, chief of the Department of Industrial Works, said a special order issued by the NCPO to deal with the problem was intended to deal with an increasing amount of electronic waste in the country.

It has no purpose for dealing with electronic trash from overseas.

However, the country has accepted the waste, which is useful for recycling only, according to the law.

“Many plants come to Thailand because we have good technology on recycling,” said Mr Mongkul.

“Even within the department, we have our own site for qualified burning.”

Regarding the electronic waste problem, he said the department is going to push around 14,000 tonnes of electronic waste out of Thailand, adding it is not just a waste receiver as last year it exported 430,000 tonnes of industrial waste to foreign countries, including China, Japan and Korea, which have good technology to deal with it.

There are 2,210 waste management plants in the country of which 148 are electronic waste recycling plants.

 ?? PHOTO: PATIPAT JANTHONG ?? BRIGHT SIDE OF DEATH: A cyclist rides past a colourful crematoriu­m at Wat Mongkol Pracharam in Nakhon Pathom’s Buddha Monthon district. The abbot said the colours help comfort mourners who attend cremation ceremonies. People donated 11 colours used for...
PHOTO: PATIPAT JANTHONG BRIGHT SIDE OF DEATH: A cyclist rides past a colourful crematoriu­m at Wat Mongkol Pracharam in Nakhon Pathom’s Buddha Monthon district. The abbot said the colours help comfort mourners who attend cremation ceremonies. People donated 11 colours used for...
 ??  ?? TRASH TO TREASURE: Precious metals are extracted. The rest is incinerate­d and dumped.
TRASH TO TREASURE: Precious metals are extracted. The rest is incinerate­d and dumped.
 ??  ?? Pol Gen Wirachai Songmetta
Pol Gen Wirachai Songmetta

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