The watches
include 11 Rolexes, eight Patek Philippes and three Richard Millies, among
others.
Prawit Wongsuwan
has been under pressure since December when the ‘CSI LA’ Facebook page began to
catalogue luxury timepieces worn by the deputy prime minister from photos and
internet news reports.
The concerted
social media campaign is urging the kingdom’s anti-graft body to probe how the
luxury watches came into Prawit’s possession — and is hugely embarrassing to
Thailand’s military government.
It toppled the
government of Yingluck Shinwatra in 2014, vowing to purge the country of graft,
a scourge it blamed on Thailand’s civilian rulers.
Prawit was one
of the architects of the coup.
On Wednesday,
the Thai-language ‘CSI LA’ page raised the watch tally after finding a fresh
photo of him wearing a Patek Phillipe model at a temple ceremony in 2014.
“We have found
25 luxury watches worth more than $1.24m, including 11 Rolexes, eight Patek
Philippes and three Richard Millies,” a post said, urging its near-750,000
followers to unearth more photos.
Prawit has so
far not disputed the number of watches.
But on Tuesday,
he told reporters his “friends lent” him watches which he duly returned.
Thailand’s
National Anti-Coruption Commission (NACC) has let a deadline for Prawit to
issue a formal explanation over the watches slip several times.
The NACC is
headed by one of the junta top brass’ former subordinates, raising fears of a
whitewash.
If the NACC
rules “that I am wrong, I will quit,” Prawit told reporters.
The slew of bad
headlines engulfing Prawit comes as his main ally, Prime Minister Prayut
Chan-O-Cha remodels himself from a strongman general into a politician ahead of
elections slated for the end of this year.
But the watch
issue has angered both junta critics and erstwhile supporters in a divided
country where politics is usually a strictly partisan affair.
Observers say
that outrage represents fatigue with junta rule, which is widely seen as
top-heavy and ineffective, and a wider yearning for a return to elections.
“The watch issue
is a sign that a new political proposition is emerging,” Sirote Klampaiboon, a
political commentator told AFP.
“This is the
first time since the junta took over in 2014 that political groups of different
sides have come together, leaving their conflicts in the past.”
(AFP)
(AFP)
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