FIRE-ENGINE SCAM
Samak, 4 others face AEC probe

Apirak off the hook because Bt6.7-bn deal signed before he became governor
Former Bangkok governor Samak Sundaravej, ex-interior minister Bhokin Bhalakula and his deputy Pracha Maleenont are among five people to be investigated by the Assets Examination Committee for alleged involvement in the fire-engine corruption scandal, a source from the AEC said yesterday. However, Apirak Kosayodhin, Samak's successor and the current Bangkok governor, who has often been linked to the case, will escape investigation because the purchase was made before he took up the post, the source said. The AEC's chairman Nam Yimyaem yesterday said its fact-finding team had enough grounds to open a full investigation of five people, including three politicians, for their parts in the allegedly overpriced Bt6.7-billion deal. He did not name them. Nam said he had received a report from the fact-finding team and would put it to the AEC's full panel on Monday to decide whether a subcommittee should be set up to investigate the accused. The AEC source said the five were former interior minister Bhokin Bhalakula, his deputy Pracha Maleenont and Pracha's assistant Somsak Kun-ngern, former Bangkok governor Samak Sundaravej and the former Bangkok Fire and Rescue Department chief Atilak Tanchukiat. Nam said the charges were malfeasance or corruption in violation of Article 157 of the Criminal Code, causing damage of over Bt6 billion to the government. Nam said the sub-committee could summon more suspects if more were involved. Last year the Department of Special Investigation said there were seven, the present five plus Apirak and then-commerce minister Wattana Muangsuk. Bhokin signed an agreement of understanding for the purchase at a government-to-government level. Pracha was responsible for discussing details with Austrian ambassador Herbert Traxl, and his assistant Somsak prepared the barter-trade plan for the deal. The Foreign Trade Department sealed the barter agreement with Steyr Daimler Puch, the Austrian supplier of fireboats, fire engines and fire-fighting equipment to the Bangkok Fire and Rescue Department while Wattana was commerce minister. The source yesterday said that Apirak, who had a letter of credit for the deal opened, was not on the AEC list for investigation because he had taken up his post after Samak signed the contract with Steyr Daimler Puch, which was conditional on the issuance of a letter of credit for payment. The AEC investigation also found that though Steyr Daimler Puch had contracted with Thai CP Foods, which had a quota to export cooked chicken, to complete the barter agreement, the meat never reached Austria, the source said. Another AEC source said yesterday Prime Minister Surayud Chulanont had asked the probe panel why it had to charge as many as 62 people in the matter of the Thaksin government's rubber-seedling project. "Why don't you just specify key politicians who did the damage, rather than taking all the fish?" Surayud was quoted as asking the AEC yesterday during a meeting with the panel. The source said the AEC had explained that it wanted to set a precedent that if any ministers were found to have acted corruptly all Cabinet members who approved the resolution were jointly responsible.
Bancha Khaengkhan, Budsarakham Sinlapalavan The Nation
|