US charges ‘may support corruption allegations’ on Parliament CCTV project

Headline: US charges ‘may support corruption allegations’ on Parliament CCTV project

Ref: THE NATION  Issued date 22 February 2017 by PRAPASRI OSATANON

 

FRESH ALLEGATIONS by the US Department of Justice (DOJ)concerning a CCTV installation project at Parliament House 10 years ago may add weight to corruption allegations, said Air Chief Marshal Weerawit Kongsak, chair of the National Legislative Assembly’s (NLA) fact-finding panel yesterday.

 

Weerawit said the panel was preparing to conclude its initial findings and would submit its report to NLA President Pornpetch Wichitcholchai by next week.

 

He said the panel had received information concerning the case from the US Department of Justice and found some corre-lations with the NLA’s existing information.

 

The correlations included the timing when the procurement took place, the companies involved and the procurement procedures.

 

The similar details suggested that corruption could have taken place, Weerawit said.

 

The panel has also found that foreigners at the subsidiary of the company that won the bid held company shares of more than 49 per cent, which exceeds the limit set by Thai law.

 

The bidding price was also found to be slightly lower than the standard price, set at Bt30.7 million, which suggested irregularities in the bidding process, Weerawit said.

 

He said the company’s subsidiary changed names twice when participating in procurements at Parliament House in 2001 and 2006.

 

The CCTV installation project involved at least 32 CCTV cameras broadcasting meetings by committees at the convention hall, as well as to a room of speakers and their deputies so that they could get updates from meetings, Weerawit said.

 

However, the cameras as well as other equipment were hardly used as the committees rarely broadcast their meetings, meaning the objective of the camera procurement failed, Weerawit added.

 

The panel will invite the company’s representatives to testify again after they failed to show up along with independent agencies, including the National AntiCorruption Commission, he said.