Scrutiny on Thai deputy prime minister's luxury watches increases


Thai deputy prime minister Prawit Wongsuwan has been in the public spotlight for his penchant for expensive watches, which has pressured Thailand's anti-graft agency to open a full probe into the matter. – EPA pic, January 24, 2018.

THE Thai junta’s number two, mired in a graft scandal over his dazzling collection of luxury watches, could be cleared of wrongdoing if he proves the timepieces were borrowed from friends, an anti-graft agency said today.

Prawit Wongsuwan’s penchant for expensive watches has captivated Thailand’s public since Facebook users began counting the expensive accessories worn by the deputy prime minister, even prompting calls for him to resign in a country where such open criticism is unusual.

Since December, the “CSI LA” Facebook page has counted 25 watches collectively worth US$1.2 million (RM4.7 million), including 11 Rolexes, eight Patek Philippes and three Richard Milles.

The affair has stirred questions over how an ex-general on a relatively humble public servant’s salary could afford items undeclared on his US$2.7 million list of assets on taking office.

The unrelenting social media campaign has heaped pressure on Prawit to resign as well as on the kingdom’s anti-graft agency to open a full, transparent probe into the bling.

Prawit, an architect of Thailand’s 2014 coup who is also defence minister, says the watches were borrowed from friends and later returned.

Thailand’s National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) is yet to open an official graft probe, but is questioning the people Prawit has listed as the watch owners.

“If the watches belong to others and not him, he doesn’t have to declare them under the law,” NACC deputy secretary-general Worawit Sukboon said.

“If the watches are his, we have to find out when he got them. Was it before he took up his post (as deputy prime minister) or after?”

The affair of the ex-general and his watches has stirred an unusual level of public outcry, in a country where criticism of the junta has been muted and the rich and powerful are rarely held to account.

Junta leader Prayut Chan-O-Cha, a longtime army ally of Prawit, yesterday denied his deputy could be prodded into resigning.

In 2014, Prayut declared his assets to NACC at around US$4 million in savings, investments and property.

Analysts say the slew of bad headlines is corrosive on Prayut’s government, which seized power wielding its anti-corruption credentials, and his own political ambitions, as the country looks towards the return of elections.

The Thai-born United States-based data analyst vowed to redouble his campaign.

“I will not stop on the issue. I will go all the way. I don’t want to be like other media where this kind of scandals comes and goes,” he said today.

“I call this culture ‘Amazing Thailand’! In any other country, the leaders would have resigned by now.” – AFP, January 24, 2018.


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