Jakarta Globe – AFP, Dec 03, 2014
Bangkok. Thai police on Wednesday said they are hunting one of the kingdom’s richest men as part of a sprawling graft probe that has rocked the country’s elite.
Bangkok. Thai police on Wednesday said they are hunting one of the kingdom’s richest men as part of a sprawling graft probe that has rocked the country’s elite.
Energy
tycoon Nopporn Suppipat is the latest high-profile figure to fall foul of the
ever-widening corruption scandal, which has already snared several top cops and
saw the family of a Thai princess stripped of their honorific title.
“The
military court approved his arrest warrant on Dec. 1 on charges of lese majeste
and illegal detention,” Lt. Gen. Prawut Thavornsiri told AFP.
Nopporn was
ranked Thailand’s 31st richest man in 2013 by Forbes magazine, with an
estimated fortune of $800 million, and is thought to be on the run.
He is
alleged to have hired men to abduct a businessman in Bangkok in order to have a
debt he owed relieved, the police spokesman added.
US-educated
Nopporn, reported to be in his early 40s, is the founder of Wind Energy
Holdings, which operates lucrative wind power plants.
“It is
likely he has fled Thailand,” the spokesman said, adding police are mulling
warrants for two more people over the corruption case.
Twenty-two
people have been arrested so far in a case that has cast light on graft at the
highest echelons of the force as the junta-backed police chief trumpets an apparently
fearless anti-corruption crusade.
But it has
also seen the palace fall under a rare spotlight after Thailand’s Crown Prince
Maha Vajiralongkorn asked the country’s junta to ban anyone from using the
surname “Akkharapongpricha”.
Three
people with the surname — an honorific given to relatives of Princess Srirasmi
following her marriage to the Crown Prince — were arrested last week on graft
charges.
Princess
Srirasmi married the Crown Prince in 2001 and was most recently seen in public
last week accompanying her husband at a royal ceremony.
They have a
son who is thought to be Vajiralongkorn’s most likely heir.
The graft
case exploded at the end of November when three senior officers — including the
head of the elite Central Investigation Bureau — were arrested on a string of
bribery charges.
Some of
those detained were also charged with lese majeste, with police saying they had
made “false claims” about a royal to justify committing crimes that allegedly
ranged from running illegal casinos to oil smuggling, kidnapping and extortion.
Thailand’s
monarchy is protected by strict lese majeste laws. Both local and international
media must heavily self-censor when covering the country’s royal family.
Under
section 112 of Thailand’s criminal code anyone convicted of defaming, insulting
or threatening the king, queen, heir or regent faces up to 15 years in prison
on each count.
Even
repeating details of the charges could mean breaking the law.
Agence France-Presse

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