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Thanong
Thanong Khanthong
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Monday , November 2 , 2009
Saxena a political bargaining chip
Posted by Thanong , Reader : 268 , 13:04:21  
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Published on November 2, 2009


 
In the first part of a series, Thanong Khanthong reports that initial pre-bargaining talks could be underway between the Democrat-controlled police and Rakesh Saxena as the leading coalition party tries to zero in |on the big fish.

After a good night's sleep in the hospital within the Bangkok Remand Prison, Rakesh Saxena woke up yesterday morning feeling fresh and in higher spirits than on the first day when he was escorted back from Vancouver. Everything became surreal to him.

The long travel took its toll on his health, especially as he has been confined to a wheelchair after suffering a stroke in March this year. Part of the left side of his body is paralysed. He admitted that he was stressed because he could not sleep. But he was beginning to be able to adjust to the new environment, according to Sophon Thitithampruek, acting commander of the Bangkok Remand Prison.

The previous evening, he had a bowl of Mama instant noodle. Yesterday morning, he ate rice soup and milk, just like other inmates. Saxena was confined to a wing of the Bangkok Remand Prison Hospital, where prisoners with contagious diseases are kept. There are five empty rooms in this hospital area. The Bangkok weather is still humid and hot. Saxena was happy enough to have an electric fan to cool him up. The prison conditions in Bangkok are far from the comfort of his home in his US$1.5 million (Bt50 million) residence in Vancouver, where the Canadian authorities had kept him under a house arrest pending an extradition ruling. Last Thursday, Saxena lost the case after a 13-year legal battle.

Now that Saxena is back in Bangkok and is going to facing charges of allegedly violating securities law and embezzling billions of baht from the defunct Bangkok Bank of Commerce, what will happen next? On TV he looked like a lost soul, who could not find his way around the City of Angels. But he still managed to keep his composure. Never underestimate the power of his brain and his political leverage as he still commands a big pot of wealth that can move the financial markets. After all, Saxena is a VIP inmate, who enjoys first-class treatment from the Thai authorities.

Saxena has now become a political bargaining chip. The Democrats are enjoying an upper hand. Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva has already made the overture by issuing a threat of his intention to catch other big fish in the net. He declared that the justice system would pursue any additional suspects found to have links with the collapse of the BBC, which caused some Bt200 billion in damage to the tax-payers' money.

Many former members of the Group of 16, such as Newin Chidchob, Suchart Tancharoen Varathep Ratanakorn, Sora-ath Klinpathum, would find it difficult to sleep peacefully from now on. Banharn Silapa-archa, then prime minister, Surakiart Sathirathai, then finance minister, and Vijit Supinit, then governor of the Bank of Thailand, could also be held accountable for the collapse of the Bangkok Bank of Commerce.

The Democrats now have rushed to take control over the police. The police are divided, but the faction that leans towards the Democrats has been assigned to handle the Saxena case. The police interrogated Saxena at Suvarnabhumi Airport and at the Crime Suppression Centre, where he spent the first night in a haunted cell. Many, who used to be locked up in that haunted cell at the Police Crime Suppression Centre, have come out to tell stories of a not-so-friendly ghost. They were haunted by the appearance of a man wearing a red shirt, who hung himself to death within that cell some time ago. Luckily for Saxena, the ghost did not pester him this time.

Some initial pre-bargaining talks must have already taken place between the Democrat-controlled police and Saxena. If he were to cooperate with the authorities by naming the other suspects in the Bangkok Bank of Commerce scandal, he could face a lighter sentence eventually. Saxena could be prosecuted by up to several dozens of other cases related to BBC with damages worth Bt10 billion. Before leaving Vancouver, Saxena also issued a threat by saying that he would reveal all the names involved if not treated fairly.

Krirk-kiat Jalichandra, the former president of the Bangkok Bank of Commerce, has also been keeping his silence. In one of the cases related to BBC, he has been sentenced to 30 years in prison. He is fighting an appeal in the Supreme Court. Krirk-kiat has all the secrets in his file. He was the one who signed all of the bank documents that gave out the sour loans. Saxena was the financial adviser of the bank then but he did not sign any documents. But the money flowed through the dummy companies both created as a camouflage of high finance.

Both Saxena and Krirkkiat can only protect themselves by telling it all. But then their lives could be in danger if they do so.

(Next: Who ordered the closure of the Bangkok Bank of Commerce to cover-up the loan scandal?)


Read comment

comment 9
happyjack date : 04/11/2009 time : 06.54

How much Chavalitt gained from insider deals is wort a look.
comment 8
happyjack date : 04/11/2009 time : 06.51

Another waste of Taxpayers Money.I wont get anything back.More Mud Slinging, Thai Style.
comment 7
Plaadip date : 03/11/2009 time : 14.05

C2, Oh! Suchart Tancharoen, maybe. But if that is the case, do you still have to use his initial? Anyway, interesting information, thank you.
comment 6
Plaadip date : 03/11/2009 time : 13.51

C2, ST means the demo's secratery general? Who is that?
comment 5
massein date : 03/11/2009 time : 12.38
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/massein

I'm assumeing that the Great Mr. T is completely uninvolved in this whole affair
comment 4
Dalmasian date : 03/11/2009 time : 12.20
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/dalmasian

ND (c2),

I do not understand you, ND. After all, you know how evil a person this RS character is and yet you are asking people to have compassion on him. Give me a break. Your action is just so illogical.

-- Dalmasian
comment 3
peacefulness date : 03/11/2009 time : 09.51
nationmultimedia.com


PICS,, blowing, blowing, blowing, floating, floating, floating ....... to the "dead sea" "ทะเลแห่งความตาย"
comment 2
notdisappointed date : 03/11/2009 time : 05.11

The BOT governor at the time, during his official visit to Burma with the then PM, called Rakesh up to tell Rakesh to leave immediately because there was a warrant for his arrest.

Rakesh escorted by Kirrkiat's cousin who helped to load 2 suitcases filled with dollars onto Rakesh's private plane. And now after 14 years Rakesh is back.

Rakesh's main contact with Group 16 came about from S.T. as his then father-in-law's had close business relationship with S.T.'s father, when they were both in the logging business. S.T. then introduced Rakesh to N.C. and the rest of the gang of 16, including Chattawat Muttamara who was the go-between. S.T. was also involved with facilitating the land ownership papers for Rakesh through the Land Dept of the MOI. As well as enabling the SPL-3 land usage deeds to be NS3K deeds as in the case of Khao Yai Country Club. I hope through his words he will have some compassion and the decency to exonerate the many scapegoats indicted and charged.
comment 1
Alien date : 02/11/2009 time : 22.41
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/alien

Again,very detailed and informative. Hopefully these people will spill their guts so that justice can be finally achieved. The U. S, does this all of the time. A good example is that they gave immuity to Sammy "the bull" Gravano in order to convict Johan Gotti, (aka "The dapper don" and "the teflon don"). Unfortunately, Gravano admitted tot he murder of 18 or 20 people so many wonder if the government gave up to much to get Gotti, - after all, they let a mass murderer go free. The government admits that sometimes it has to "make a deal with the devil" to get a bigger fish.
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