End scourge of corruption

End scourge of corruption

The Year of the Rooster under the Chinese lunar calendar ended this week and one of the happiest people in this country could be Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha who is still clinging on to the country's top job. With the start of the Year of the Dog, he has no reason to celebrate but a major problem to tackle with the rise of corruption in the public sector.

On Thursday, a joint survey on the corruption situation by the University of the Thai Chamber of Commerce (UTCC) and the Anti-Corruption Organisation of Thailand indicated that the level of graft in the government sector was rising last year. The survey pointed out the situation will get worse this year given that more megaprojects initiated by the government will undergo the procurement process.

Gen Prayut and his band of men in uniform staged the coup d'etat in May 2014 with one of the pretexts being to stamp out corruption.

During the first three years after the coup, joint surveys by the two organisations did not portray this unpleasant scenario, partly because many megaprojects had not yet been kickstarted.

The corruption devil was resurrected in the form of under-the-table payments that businesses bidding for government contracts had to pay to politicians and state officials, according to the survey which interviewed about 2,400 people, including business people and government officials.

Businessmen from all walks of life have only been discussing the sudden rise in corrupt practices behind closed doors.

The latest survey basically sealed the deal. It revealed that graft started to resurface last year, reaching the highest level since the coup. Bribery for projects is now back to 5-15% of the project value which could cost the country in excess of 200 billion baht or anywhere between 0.41% to 1.23% of gross domestic product (GDP).

This level of corruption is back to the pre-military rule level of 2014, therefore, indicating that all the calls to fight graft have fallen on deaf ears.

To make matters worse, a fifth of those surveyed said politicians have used their power and positions to benefit themselves or their people. Since the coup, "politicians" actually means those appointed by the military regime to run the country.

About a quarter of the business people in the survey said they have had to pay up to 18% of the project value in the form of tea money to those in power to get their job done, which the UTCC said was the highest for the past three years.

This worrying trend comes at a time when the military regime has been embroiled in a scandal involving Deputy Prime Minister Prawit Wongsuwon who has been spotted wearing undeclared assets -- 25 luxury watches that cost nearly 40 million baht in total.

Gen Prawit said he borrowed them from friends, an excuse later repeated by former police chief Somyot Poompunmuang who also said that he had borrowed up to 300 million baht from a friend who owns the Victoria's Secret Massage parlour.

As the regime comes to the end of its lifecycle with a possible general election to take place this or next year, those who have been backing it may want to use as much of the remaining time to milk some money from state projects.

Such revelations of corruption are likely to further erode the trust and faith that the people have in this government.

It is therefore paramount for the prime minister to do all that he has in in power to curtail the rise in corruption and surgically remove the cancerous corruption tumor before it is too late.

Editorial

Bangkok Post editorial column

These editorials represent Bangkok Post thoughts about current issues and situations.

Email : anchaleek@bangkokpost.co.th

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