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Anti-corruption body reveals personal finances of 80 MPs


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Anti-corruption body reveals personal finances of 80 MPs

By The Nation

 

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The National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) on Friday (September 20) reported the personal finances of 80 members of the House of Representatives, 79 of whom were signed in after the March election, and one of whom recently resigned from the position.

 

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Notable MPs whose assets and debts were revealed today include Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit, leader of Future Forward Party (FFP); Pannika Wanich, the FFP spokesperson, Piyabutr Saengkanokkul, the FFP secretary-general; Parina Kraikup, an MP of Phalang Pracharat Party from Ratchaburi province, and Mongkolkit Suksintharanon, a party list MP and leader of Thai Civilized Party.

 

 Source: https://www.nationthailand.com/news/30376463

 

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-- © Copyright The Nation Thailand 2019-09-20
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I want to see the worth of the majority of kanchanaburi officials! Some of them purposely drive beaten up cars but they have frightening amounts of land all of which originally was public/forest/army land. Some of these people are on an 8k a month wage yet just built million plus houses on multiple plots of land and are travelling overseas every couple of months. Disgusting!

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15 minutes ago, nikmar said:

is there any sensible reason as to why Prayut and Prawit are exempt from giving their financial details?

 

The whole unholy bunch of previous junta ministers are excluded to declare their assets by their own NACC.

 

 The National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) has reported that the Prime Minister, Gen. Prayut Chan-o-cha, and several cabinet ministers who worked in the previous government are not required to submit new declarations of assets and liabilities to the commission. 

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5 minutes ago, Eric Loh said:

The whole unholy bunch of previous junta ministers are excluded to declare their assets by their own NACC.

 

 The National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) has reported that the Prime Minister, Gen. Prayut Chan-o-cha, and several cabinet ministers who worked in the previous government are not required to submit new declarations of assets and liabilities to the commission. 

Jesus, you have to hand them a tiny bit of praise. They have made themselves completely untouchable. 

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24 minutes ago, klauskunkel said:

Its already taken care of. When you click on the link in the story: 

 

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Yes, I noticed that, Klaus (above). How very convenient. Not that anything truly revealing would be disclosed anyway - or even if it were, it would not affect the junta in the slightest.

They are in situ for all eternity (unless the Thai ACT ...).

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59 minutes ago, Eric Loh said:

The whole unholy bunch of previous junta ministers are excluded to declare their assets by their own NACC.

 

 The National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC) has reported that the Prime Minister, Gen. Prayut Chan-o-cha, and several cabinet ministers who worked in the previous government are not required to submit new declarations of assets and liabilities to the commission. 

This is because they have already disclosed.

 

Thanathorn is now the richest at 5.6 billion baht.

 

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6 minutes ago, fxe1200 said:

Prajuths wealth had been published back in 2014. Then it was 4.06 Mio. USD. Should be double by know.

More like double every year. Ever more the reason why he is not disclosing like all other elected MPs with a little help from the friendly NACC. 

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2 hours ago, Eric Loh said:

More like double every year. Ever more the reason why he is not disclosing like all other elected MPs with a little help from the friendly NACC. 

The system follows a set of rules whereby the first disclosure is made public (but not always in a very public way - indeed if journalists had not see the current list on the board it was pinned to for a period of X days, it would have been removed and not necessarily have been publicly viewable after that ) its also published when the role in public service is completed. The interim yearly disclosures are to the NACC for them to vet for unexplained increases but not made public.

Many governments have a similar system but do not "publish" publicly. They all should IMHO, anyone in public service (incl civil servants) above a minimal rank should. I worked in the civil service for a few years, and had to conform myself (but not publicly disclosed due to privacy laws in the country I worked).

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5 hours ago, nikmar said:

is there any sensible reason as to why Prayut and Prawit are exempt from giving their financial details?

 

it's all about an inability

to Tell the Truth, the Whole truth, and Nothing But the truth...

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