Bribery: Thailand's favourite pastime
Is it becoming a race to punish the alleged bribers and the bribed? We shall see, but things are definitely heating up for Jutamas Siriwan, former governor of the Tourism Authority of Thailand. The opening of a trial in the United States of those who allegedly paid money to Thai officials between 2002 and 2006 to get special treatment in the Bangkok International Film Festival means that she will be worried as much by what happens in the US courts as by the local legal process.
It will be interesting to see how things go. It is rare for two countries to have parallel legal procedures in the same corruption case. While a verdict in one country may not be legally binding in the other -- meaning that a "guilty" verdict against the alleged bribers in America may not necessarily mean Jutamas will automatically lose her case here -- we are in for some unique precedents. In this interconnected world, corruption cases can span across continents.
Jutamas' name has reportedly come up in US court transcripts. Locally, she has vehemently denied involvement in the bribery scandal, which allegedly took place when she was TAT governor during the Thaksin government. Local investigators have established that irregularities concerning the film festival involved bribery, favouritism and suspicious budgets that were within Jutamas's power to approve. The case has been forwarded to the National Anti-Corruption Commission, which is expected to make a decision soon on how to proceed.
In the US, the trial of two Hollywood producers accused of trying to bribe their way into running the Bangkok International Film Festival is now underway at the US Federal District Court in Los Angeles. The US indictment, filed in December 2007, claims that Gerald Green, the executive producer of the 2006 film "Rescue Dawn", and his wife Patricia, conspired to pay a Thai government official more than US$1.7 million (Bt58 million) to land the contract to run the festival, which would allegedly yield more than $10 million in return.
Nothing seems too complicated here. The case is no different from a Thai contractor paying a politician under the table to beat other bidders to a lucrative deal. The American couple is being subjected to the hand of their country's foreign business law that prohibits such practice. But if the prospect of a $10 million profit had lured them into taking the risk, we may be seeing only the tip of an iceberg here.
The US laws against corrupt practices of American business people overseas shook the Thai political scene a few years back, also during the Thaksin government.