Questions raised about 11 anti-graft candidates

The Senate panel probing the background of 18 candidates for the National Counter Corruption Commission (NCCC) has found 11 have questionable backgrounds.
The panel submitted the results of its probe after scrutinising reports on all candidates over the past 43 days. Panel secretary Senator Wallop Tangkananurak said they would submit four sets of reports - but two were confidential and could not be disclosed to the public. He said that six candidates had problems over whether their positions were equivalent to director-general or not. And seven were suspected to have political links, although there is concrete evidence. Five of the nominees did not give clear evidence about the source of their income and assets. They also were suspected of abusing their positions for self-interest. Some had close ties with criminals. Wallop criticised Senate Speaker Suchon Chaleekrua for meeting with Labour Minister Somsak Thepsuthin, saying Suchon should have acted in a neutral manner and complied with the Constitution. Suchon said Monday he would request the Cabinet to reconvene the House for a special session to select nine of the 18 anti-graft commissioners and to appoint a panel to probe the background of 10 candidates for the Election Commission. The Nation
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