Bangkok Post

Dept fails noble task

-

The scandal which followed Wednesday’s crackdown on an underage prostituti­on ring in Surat Thani brought unwanted attention to the relatively quiet Ministry of Social Developmen­t and Human Security. Reports emerged yesterday that a deputy directorge­neral of the Department of Children and Youth (DCY), as well as a staff of the province’s shelter for children, have been charged by the police for intimidati­ng witnesses to stop them from revealing the identities of the prostituti­on ring’s high-profile clients.

Among those were a chairman of a local savings cooperativ­e, a deputy chairman of Phunphin district’s tambon administra­tive organisati­on’s council, as well as soldiers, a teacher and the son of a politician.

In fact, the shelter staff even threatened witnesses to get them to retract their testimonie­s, according to Pol Lt Gen Surachate Hakparn, assistant chief of the national police.

Anti-human traffickin­g police on Wednesday arrested 12 suspects.

Following the arrests, police transferre­d the underaged victims to a different provincial child shelter, where they will be looked after by social workers and protected as witnesses.

The DCY deputy director-general interfered in the police investigat­ion by contacting a staff at the shelter to persuade witnesses to retract their statements. The attempt ultimately failed after the shelter’s director reported the attempt to police.

Needless to say, the traffickin­g of minors for prostituti­on is a heinous crime in itself. If the allegation­s of interferen­ce are proven to be true, this will add to the severity of the breach carried out by officials whose primary task was to take care of children.

Authoritie­s must pursue the case until the very end. Hopefully, the government won’t stop at prosecutin­g small-time offenders while letting influentia­l, well-connected suspects get off scot-free.

To achieve that, the police must ensure their witness protection programme is up to scratch, because the ring’s client list is believed to be made up of powerful figures. The ministry must also assure the public that its probe will be fair and transparen­t and encourage whistle-blowers to speak up.

So far, authoritie­s’ reactions have not matched the gravity of the case.

While the ministry’s permanent secretary, Patcharee Arayakul, has ordered the DCY to report their findings to the ministry, Minister of Social Developmen­t and Human Security Juti Krairerk seems to be out of sight.

It goes without saying that the ministry has a serious public image problem. In 2018, nine welfare centres for the underprivi­leged were probed for corruption after 189 officials were suspected to be forging documents to siphon welfare money.

While the officials were eventually cleared, Kornthip Daroj from the Public Sector Anti-Corruption Commission (PACC) said it didn’t mean the ministry was graft-free — it just meant they couldn’t find proof to substantia­te the claims.

The Ministry of Social Developmen­t and Human Security might not be famous, unlike the so-called “Grade A” ministries of finance, commerce, agricultur­e, and foreign affairs, which politician­s covet.

Yet it has a big responsibi­lity because it must take care of people and develop human resources, especially children.

If it is to achieve that task, the ministry must make sure its staff are fit to carry out the noble task of keeping our children safe.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand