Coalition figures question ‘new election’ scenario

MFP spokesman asks whether Deputy PM Wissanu is trying to influence senators

Move Forward leader Pita Limjaroenrat waves to supporters as he arrives at the Thai Chamber of Commerce offices to discuss his economic policies with business leaders on Wednesday. (Photo: Chanat Katanyu)
Move Forward leader Pita Limjaroenrat waves to supporters as he arrives at the Thai Chamber of Commerce offices to discuss his economic policies with business leaders on Wednesday. (Photo: Chanat Katanyu)

Two key members of the new coalition have questioned why caretaker Deputy Prime Minister Wissanu Krea-ngam raised the spectre of a new election if a shareholding complaint against Move Forward Party (MFP) leader Pita Limjaroenrat is upheld.

Move Forward spokesman Rangsiman Rome on Thursday reiterated that his party was well prepared to clarify the party leader’s shareholding in iTV Plc, saying the complaints against Mr Pita were politically motivated.

The MFP list MP-elect questioned why Mr Wissanu raised the scenario of a new nationwide general election if a ruling against against Mr Pita leads to the revocation of his prime ministerial eligibility, MP status and his endorsement of his party’s candidates in the May 14 polls.

“In making such remarks, You (Mr Wissanu) are trying to advise senators (how to vote), aren’t you?” Mr Rangsiman asked rhetorically. “This is a way to influence society and will make senators hesitate with hopes for a windfall.

“My question is whether the way you are doing it will create chaos in society or not. It’s tantamount to showing no respect for the intention of people who exercised their voting rights.”

He advised people not to attach much importance to the scenario outlined by Mr Wissanu. Although Mr Wissanu is known as a legal expert, he said, it did not mean that everything he said was correct.

“Instead of giving a press interview in this manner, it’s better for Mr Wissanu to suggest to Gen Prayut Chan-o-cha that he show some spirit and pack his belongings from Government House,” said Mr Rangsiman, referring to the caretaker prime minister.

Pressed by reporters on Wednesday, Mr Wissanu said how the details in the shareholding complaint against Mr Pita were interpreted would be a key factor in deciding his fate.

If a complaint targets Mr Pita’s eligibility to be an MP he could still be prime minister, because the prime minister is not required to be an MP, he said. If a complaint targets his prime ministerial qualifications, he could still be an MP.

A complaint could also question Mr Pita’s approval of Move Forward memberships, Mr Wissanu said. “In that case, there would have to be a new nationwide general election,” he said.

He was responding to questions about the possible scenarios if the case goes to the Constitutional Court. At the moment, the Election Commission is reviewing the case and if it decides he did not violate any rules, that is the end of the story.

Chusak Sirinil, a deputy leader of the Pheu Thai Party, also shrugged off Mr Wissanu’s remarks about a new election, calling such a scenario far-fetched.

Mr Pita endorsed election candidates in the May 14 polls in his capacity as his party’s leader, not as an MP or prime minister, said Mr Chusak, the head of Pheu Thai’s legal team. Mr Pita’s party leadership was legal and in line with the party’s regulations. It had nothing to do with any shareholding, said Mr Chusak.

Senator Seree Suwanpanont, however, on Thursday echoed Mr Wissanu’s remarks, saying there was possibility that a ruling against Mr Pita could cause the May 14 results to be nullified and a new vote held.

He contends that Mr Pita was aware that he was not qualified to be an MP because of the media shareholding. This meant that he endorsed the candidates despite the fact that he was not qualified, said the appointed senator.

In his view, the election should be nullified only in constituencies where there were MFP candidates, not all constituencies. However, some may argue that there must be new nationwide polls because votes that the MFP received on May 14 would affect votes of other candidates.

The case against Mr Pita involves 42,000 shares in iTV, an independent broadcaster founded in the 1990s. The shares were originally held by his father, who died in 2006. In his role as manager of the estate, Mr Pita tried to sell the shares but could not find a buyer.

He said earlier that he had explained the matter to the poll body before he was sworn in after the election in 2019.

iTV stopped broadcasting in 2007 and its licence was taken over by Thai PBS. It was delisted from the Stock Exchange of Thailand in 2014. It has not had any income from media activity for several years, beyond small sums from a subsidiary that rented out broadcasting equipment. However, its business registration remains active only because litigation over its concession fees is not yet concluded.

Continue Reading

Pheu Thai scraps B10,000 handout

Party cites high cost of welfare policies of coalition partner Move Forward

Srettha Thavisin, a prime ministerial candidate of the Pheu Thai Party, announces its 10,000-baht handout plan during a campaign rally in Nonthaburi on April 6. (Photo: Pattarapong Chatpattarasill)
Srettha Thavisin, a prime ministerial candidate of the Pheu Thai Party, announces its 10,000-baht handout plan during a campaign rally in Nonthaburi on April 6. (Photo: Pattarapong Chatpattarasill)

The Pheu Thai Party has scrapped the 10,000-baht handout it promised during the election campaign, saying the high cost of the Move Forward Party’s welfare programmes would make it unfeasible.

The two parties are the main partners in an eight-party coalition but Move Forward is setting the policy agenda because it won 10 more seats than Pheu Thai on May 14.

Pheu Thai continues to insist that it will not abandon the coalition and will support Move Forward leader Pita Limjaroenrat as the next prime minister, but the two parties are competing for the House speaker’s seat.

And while leaders of both parties have issued calls for unity, rumours continue to swirl that Pheu Thai would be part of an alternative coalition should the current arrangement collapse.

The Pheu Thai economic team on Thursday decided to scrap the 10,000-baht digital money handout because the welfare programmes planned by Move Forward would cost the state about 500 billion baht, said Phaophum Rojanasakul, the Pheu Thai deputy secretary-general.

“For the 10,000-baht digital wallet policy of the Pheu Thai Party, we still see a necessity to stimulate the national economy amid its weakness,” he said.

“But the policy would cost the state about 560 billion baht while the leading party’s welfare policies would require a similar amount of money. So, we must shelve this project.”

Pheu Thai had clear capital-oriented policies for high economic growth with equality, Mr Phaophum said.

Under its handout scheme, every Thai national 16 years old and over would be given a digital wallet with 10,000 baht to be spent within six months at businesses within a four-kilometre radius of where they live.

Srettha Thavisin, a businessman and Pheu Thai prime ministerial candidate, said during the election campaign that the handout would create an “economic tsunami” with positive ripple effects nationwide.

Move Forward, meanwhile, has promised a new and more inclusive welfare system with comprehensive coverage across all age groups.

Highlights include a 1,200-baht monthly child support grant and a 3,000-baht monthly pension for the elderly.

Continue Reading

900kg of crystal meth seized from fishing trawler

Six arrested with shipment believed destined for Australia on boat off Koh Samet

Wichai Chaimongkhon, secretary-general of the Narcotics Control Board, examines sacks and barrels containing more than 900kg of crystal methamphetamine during a media briefing on Thursday. (Photo: Narcotics Control Board)
Wichai Chaimongkhon, secretary-general of the Narcotics Control Board, examines sacks and barrels containing more than 900kg of crystal methamphetamine during a media briefing on Thursday. (Photo: Narcotics Control Board)

Authorities have arrested six drug smugglers and seized 909 kilogrammes of crystal methamphetamine, believed to be destined for Australia, from a fishing trawler south of Koh Samet in the Gulf of Thailand.

The seizure was the culmination of a four-month operation that began with an intelligence report from the National Security Council (NSC), according to Wichai Chaimongkhon, secretary-general of the Narcotics Control Board (NCB).

The NSC had learned that transnational drug traffickers were using medium-sized trawlers to deliver shipments of methamphetamine and heroin, weighing about a tonne, to a large liner in the middle of the Gulf. The deliveries took place in international waters, beyond the reach of Thai law enforcement.

The NCB set up a special task force, in cooperation with the Naval Special Warfare Command or SEALs, which spent four months monitoring the activities of the suspected traffickers, said Mr Wichai.

On Tuesday of this week, team members on a stakeout in Rayong spotted the crew of a trawler loading empty stainless steel barrels, fuel and food. At 8.45 that night, a white pickup truck pulled up and the crew loaded several heavy fertiliser sacks onto the trawler before it set out from shore.

The team began following the boat and intercepted it south of Koh Samet in Rayong province, about 20 nautical miles from shore.

Six suspects were arrested with 909 kilogrammes of crystal methamphetamine seized, Mr Wichai said at a briefing on Thursday at the NCB offices in Din Daeng district of Bangkok.

Officers inspect the fishing trawler on which drugs were seized and six smugglers arrested. (Photo: Narcotics Control Board)

Authorities later searched seven locations — five in Rayong and two in Bangkok. During the search, they seized one fishing trawler, six cars, two motorcycles, bank account passbooks, ATM cards and other assets with a combined worth of at least 5.2 million baht.

Officers also searched a rented house in Rayong that was used as a storage site for drugs. Many empty fertiliser sacks were found there.

During questioning, the suspects admitted to having smuggled the drugs from Bangkok to the fishing trawler in Rayong. A bag of ketamine, for the crew’s personal use, was also found in the vessel.

One of the suspects who was the boat owner said the seized drugs were about to be loaded onto a large liner headed for Australia.

Mr Wichai said the NCB would widen the investigation to seize assets of all those involved in the smuggling operation.

Sacks and barrels containing 909kg of crystal methamphetamine seized from the fishing trawler off Koh Samet are displayed for a briefing on Thursday. (Photo: Narcotics Control Board)

Continue Reading

Local grocers headed accused Chinese fraudsters’ firms

Duo were paid B4,000 a month for each of the 48 shell companies they represented, say police

National police chief Pol Gen Damrongsak Kittiprapas holds one of the Bearbrick dolls seized from a Chinese couple suspected of fraud, at a press conference at the Cyber Crime Investigation Bureau on Wednesday. (Photo: Pattarapong Chatpattarasill)
National police chief Pol Gen Damrongsak Kittiprapas holds one of the Bearbrick dolls seized from a Chinese couple suspected of fraud, at a press conference at the Cyber Crime Investigation Bureau on Wednesday. (Photo: Pattarapong Chatpattarasill)

Police have found that two grocers in Bangkok acted as directors of 48 shell companies linked to a Chinese couple facing charges of running a 10-billion-baht international fraud scheme.

The two grocers, who had shops in Thon Buri, were paid 4,000 baht a month for each company they represented, said Pol Maj Gen Amnat Traipote, deputy commissioner of the Cyber Crime Investigation Bureau.

The companies were legally registered with the Department of Business Development to engage in activities including tour guide services, brokerage, wholesale, holding and property trade.

Thai shareholders held 51% in each company and Chinese nationals the rest. The businesses had 5 million baht in registered capital each and were all headquartered at houses in the same luxury housing estate in Prawet district where the Chinese couple were arrested on Wednesday.

Police are now checking the tax records of the companies, Pol Maj Gen Amnat said on Thursday.

Shaoxian Su, 31, and his girlfriend Keyi Ye, 25, were arrested at their 67-million-baht house in The Palazzo Srinakarin estate in Prawet on charges of public fraud and money laundering.

Police say the couple lured people in many countries into fake investments in digital currencies and other assets, with damages estimated at 10 billion baht.

Police suspect companies in their network had bought 19 luxury houses in the same estate in Prawet and leased them out to other Chinese people.

On Wednesday police impounded hundreds of millions of baht worth of assets from the couple, including expensive Bearbrick dolls.

Continue Reading

One illegal migrant killed, 10 others arrested after pickup truck overturns

Police arrest a group of illegal migrants from Myanmar - eight men and two women - after a pickup truck smuggling them overturned in Sangkhla Buri district of Kanchanaburi province late on Wednesday night. (Photo supplied/Piyarat Chongcharoen)
Police arrest a group of illegal migrants from Myanmar – eight men and two women – after a pickup truck smuggling them overturned in Sangkhla Buri district of Kanchanaburi province late on Wednesday night. (Photo supplied/Piyarat Chongcharoen)

KANCHANABURI: One illegal migrant from Myanmar was killed and 10 others arrested after a pickup truck carrying them overturned in Sangkhla Buri district late on Wednesday night. A police officer was also injured after being hit by one of three pickup trucks smuggling migrants.

At around 10pm, a joint team of soldiers, police and local authorities spotted the three suspected pickup trucks speeding along a local road at Sanehpong village, Moo 3, in tambon Nong Lu.  

Officers signalled the vehicles to stop for a search, but the drivers accelerated and fled. One of the trucks hit and injured Pol Capt Pathiphan Yawan, deputy crime suppression chief at Sangkhla Buri station. The officer was rushed to Sangkhla Buri Hospital.

Shortly after, the team received a report that a pickup truck overturned into a roadside ditch near a homestay in Nong Lu.

Upon arrival, the officers found that the vehicle was one of the three trucks involved in the smuggling operation. One man from Myanmar was found dead inside the wreckage.

The officers inspected the area and found a group of people hiding in a nearby forest. All were confirmed to be illegal migrants from Myanmar. They comprised eight men and two women. The dead man was later identified as Zaw Leng Gu, 22. 

All migrants were handed over to police at Sangkhla Buri station for legal action.

One of three pickup trucks carrying illegal migrants overturns in Kanchanaburi’s Sangkhla Buri district late on Wednesday night. (Photo supplied/Piyarat Chongcharoen)

Continue Reading

One illegal migrant killed, 10 arrested after pickup overturns

Police arrest a group of illegal migrants from Myanmar - eight men and two women - after a pickup truck smuggling them overturned in Sangkhla Buri district of Kanchanaburi province late on Wednesday night. (Photo supplied/Piyarat Chongcharoen)
Police arrest a group of illegal migrants from Myanmar – eight men and two women – after a pickup truck smuggling them overturned in Sangkhla Buri district of Kanchanaburi province late on Wednesday night. (Photo supplied/Piyarat Chongcharoen)

KANCHANABURI: One illegal migrant from Myanmar was killed and 10 others arrested after a pickup truck carrying them overturned in Sangkhla Buri district late on Wednesday night. A police officer was also injured after being hit by one of three pickup trucks smuggling migrants.

At around 10pm, a joint team of soldiers, police and local authorities spotted the three suspected pickup trucks speeding along a local road at Sanehpong village, Moo 3, in tambon Nong Lu.  

Officers signalled the vehicles to stop for a search, but the drivers accelerated and fled. One of the trucks hit and injured Pol Capt Pathiphan Yawan, deputy crime suppression chief at Sangkhla Buri station. The officer was rushed to Sangkhla Buri Hospital.

Shortly after, the team received a report that a pickup truck overturned into a roadside ditch near a homestay in Nong Lu.

Upon arrival, the officers found that the vehicle was one of the three trucks involved in the smuggling operation. One man from Myanmar was found dead inside the wreckage.

The officers inspected the area and found a group of people hiding in a nearby forest. All were confirmed to be illegal migrants from Myanmar. They comprised eight men and two women. The dead man was later identified as Zaw Leng Gu, 22. 

All migrants were handed over to police at Sangkhla Buri station for legal action.

One of three pickup trucks carrying illegal migrants overturns in Kanchanaburi’s Sangkhla Buri district late on Wednesday night. (Photo supplied/Piyarat Chongcharoen)

Continue Reading

Road accident claims 4 lives, injures 6 migrants in Ayutthaya

Rescue workers try to open the wrecked vehicle where four people were killed instantly after it overturned and caught fire in Bang Pa-in district, Ayutthaya, early Thursday morning. (Photo: Soonthorn Phongpao)
Rescue workers try to open the wrecked vehicle where four people were killed instantly after it overturned and caught fire in Bang Pa-in district, Ayutthaya, early Thursday morning. (Photo: Soonthorn Phongpao)

AYUTTHAYA: Four people were burnt to death in a Bangkok-bound SUV that overturned while carrying migrant workers past Bang Pa-in district at 12.20am on Thursday.

The incident happened on Highway 32 in front of Chiang Rak Noi School in tambon Chiang Rak Noi. The SsangYong Musso SUV, registered in Bangkok, flipped over and went up in flames shortly after residents had heard an explosion.

Six severely injured migrants, comprising three men and three women, managed to escape from the vehicle just before the explosion. They were taken to Wang Noi and Bang Pa-in hospitals.

Four others, including three migrant women and a Thai male driver, died in the fire that engulfed the vehicle. 

All of the migrants from Myanmar had illegally entered Thailand, according to reports.

Police assumed the driver was speeding and lost control of the SUV at the location adjacent to Phahonyothin Highway. Witnesses also reported hearing screeching sounds followed by a loud bang.

Continue Reading

Covert truck bribery stickers ‘do exist’

Another sticker which indicates a bribe is found on the windscreen of an overloaded trucks. (Photo: Wiroj Lakkhanaadisorn Facebook)
Another sticker which indicates a bribe is found on the windscreen of an overloaded trucks. (Photo: Wiroj Lakkhanaadisorn Facebook)

Covert stickers showing that trucks operating illegally on Thailand’s roads have paid bribes to police and other officials to avoid arrest do in fact exist, according to national police chief Pol Gen Damrongsak Kittiprapas.

After the controversy was brought to light by Wiroj Lakkhanaadisorn, a Move Forward Party list MP-elect, Pol Maj Gen Ekkaraj Limsangkat, commander of the Highway Police Division, was transferred to an inactive post at the Operations Centre of the Central Investigation Bureau (CIB) on Tuesday.

The order was signed by CIB chief Pol Lt Gen Jirabhop Bhuridej. Pol Maj Gen Ekkaraj was replaced by Pol Maj Gen Jaroonkiat Pankaew, commander of the Anti-Corruption Division (ACD).

Pol Gen Damrongsak on  Wednesday responded to the matter by saying the Office of the Inspector-General of the Royal Thai Police will work with the CIB to expedite the investigation.

“I admit that these ‘bribe-paid’ stickers have been around for a long time. Every agency is speeding up its investigation to find how many are out there. The investigation should be finished within 15 days,” said Pol Gen Damrongsak.

The commander of the Highway Police Division was transferred to ensure the investigation is carried out transparently, Pol Gen Damrongsak said. The probe will be expanded to track down the recipients of the bribes, some of whom may be state officials, he said.

Pol Gen Damrongsak said any state officials or police who are found to be involved in the scheme will face criminal cases and disciplinary punishment.

More than 79 officers have been dismissed for committing such offences this year, he added.

“Since the matter has recently grabbed headlines, an order will be given for a deeper probe,” he said.

Continue Reading

Phuket curbs visa overstays

Tourists relax on a beach on Ko Racha Yai isalnd, Phuket in January. (Photo: Achadthaya Chuenniran)
Tourists relax on a beach on Ko Racha Yai isalnd, Phuket in January. (Photo: Achadthaya Chuenniran)

Phuket’s acclaimed crime-free project has proved successful, with over 1,000 foreigners caught overstaying their visas.

With the cooperation of 800 accommodation providers on the resort island, the Phuket Immigration Office has endorsed crime-free measures which allow businesses to inform police of any suspicious activities involving foreign guests.

Pol Col Thanet Sukchai, the Phuket immigration chief, on Wednesday said the number of foreign guests registered at accommodation in Phuket over the last two months was over 20% higher than the number of foreign tourists who had arrived in Phuket during that period.

Pol Col Thanet said the new database helped police track down one missing foreigner recently.

He said that during May 1-25, Immigration Police raided 1,550 target locations in Phuket and arrested 11 foreigners who had overstayed their visas and another four people who had entered Thailand illegally.

According to the Immigration Bureau’s Information Technology Centre, 1,050 foreigners had overstayed their visas.

Of those, 391 were not staying at their reported accommodation and 228 had since left Thailand.

Some 331 tourists had requested to extend their visas, 109 reportedly died, one was a bedridden patient and the other had received Thai citizenship, the centre said.

Only nine overstayers were facing legal action, said Pol Col Thanet.

He said anyone with information about tourists overstaying their visas or breaching the law in other ways could submit it to the Phuket Immigration Office or the Traffy Fondue application.

Continue Reading

Dept on high alert for monkeypox

Jakkarat: Urges safe sex practices
Jakkarat: Urges safe sex practices

The Department of Disease Control is on alert for more monkeypox cases, especially among the LGBTQ community, saying the best way to prevent the disease is by reducing all close skin contact and not switching partners frequently.

Jakkarat Pittayawong-anont, director of the Department of Disease Control’s epidemiology division, said the number of patients infected with the virus seems to be stable, with only a few cases per month reported.

However he suspects there are many more unreported infections.

“Since the first case was discovered, we now have around 40 cases nationwide. Interestingly, we have seen more patients among the [homosexual] and LGBTQ group. So we would like to ask for more careful behaviour in terms of their sexual relations to help prevent the disease from spreading further,” he said.

Thailand in July of last year recorded its first case of monkeypox, diagnosed in a 27-year-old Nigerian man who travelled from his home country to Phuket.

He was admitted to hospital with a fever, cough, sore throat and runny nose. He also had rashes and lesions originating in his genital area, which had spread to other parts of his body.

The Ministry of Public Health later put out a warning about the disease and sought cooperation from hospitals and sex clinics, asking them to report any suspected cases to the ministry.

It also asked that all people arriving in the country be warned about the disease and to inform authorities if they had any of the symptoms.

Dr Jakkarat said close skin-to-skin contact is a prime cause of monkeypox infections so the best way to prevent the disease is by minimising this. Monkeypox is not an STD so wearing a condom will not prevent infection, he added.

Regarding vaccinations, he said jabs are not necessary at present because the rate of infection is so slow. Moreover, it is not a deadly virus and all of the symptoms can be treated.

The World Health Organization (WHO) said recently that monkeypox is no longer a global public health emergency, but all countries should remain vigilant.

WHO reported over 87,000 cases and 140 deaths found in 111 countries last year.

Continue Reading