Corruption in the Suvarnabhumi Airport project

Corruption in the Suvarnabhumi Airport project

Allegations of corruption during the development of Suvarnabhumi Airport, the new international airport serving Bangkok, Thailand, have been made since the project's inception. These allegations started in the 1970s, when the land for the airport was purchased during the dictatorship of Thanom Kittikachorn,[1] and extended to the government of Thaksin Shinawatra, during which most of the construction occurred. To date, no Thai government, police, or auditor-general investigation has shown any corruption in the project.

The Nation, a Thai anti-Thaksin newspaper, published several reports alleging corruption in the purchase of x-ray baggage scanning devices for the airport. The resulting scandal delayed the opening of the airport by a year and allowed the opposition Democrat Party to initiate a 20 hour no-confidence censure debate that forced Thaksin to remove close supporter Suriya Jungrungreangkit from his position of Transport Minister. The Royal Thai Army executed a military coup in 2006, using the allegedly shoddy construction of the airport as one of the justifications for its coup.[2] The junta initiated several investigations into the airport. The investigative panels found that damage to the airport was "minute" and "common." The cost of fixing the damage was estimated at less than 1% of the total airline cost. The junta was accused of delaying airport repairs and intensifying the airport's problems in order to pin further blame on the deposed government.

In 2008, The Nation admitted that its reports of corruption were incorrect, and retracted their stories.[3]

Contents

Overview

Charges of corruption have been made against Thai governments since its inception in the 1970s. "All the recent previous governments before Thaksin took part in taking something from the project," noted Chaiwat Sinsuwong, a member of the Council of Engineers.[4]

Weera Somkuamkit, of the People's Network on Corruption has noted that "Someone got a big payoff just by laying down the sand. There's corruption in every airport project such as the car park, bidding on duty free shops, cooling system for the buildings and power generating system."[5] Weera Somkuamkit has yet made public any evidence supporting his claims. Based on this and other allegations, the Opposition during the Thaksin government initiated a vote of no confidence debate against the Thaksin-government Transport Minister. The censure motion was not successful.

Car park

The airport contains 2 5-storey car park buildings with a combined capacity of 5,000 cars.

Two videos were released in which car park contractor Latthapol Kesakotin, in one video, claimed that he paid USD $250 million to Yaowaret Shinawatra (the Prime Minister's sister) to gain a contract to build and operate the airport car park, and another video in which he claimed he didn't pay anything to Yaowaret. He later publicly denied that he paid anything to Yaowaret.[5]

Bomb detectors

26 CTX 9000 DSi explosive detection x-ray baggage scanning devices were purchased from GE Invision with a total contract value of USD $65m.[6] In response to concerns from the International Air Transport Association (IATA) that the 26 devices would not be sufficient, the equipment specifications were revised and another 20 devices were acquired. The new specifications also required modification of several other elements of the airport. The CTX 9000 model was selected by the airport primary contractor's design consultant, Cage Inc.[7] The choice was also endorsed by New Bangkok International Airport’s independent adviser, Quatrotec Inc.

The Nation, an English-language newspaper, published reports claiming corruption in the purchase of the CTX bomb scanners.[5] Abhisit Vejjajiva, leader of the opposition Democrat Party, initiated an unsuccessful censure debate against Transport Minister Suriya Jungrungreangkit. The Opposition alleged that in November 2004, Suriya had known that Invision was under investigation by the US Department of Justice, and therefore would not be able to provide the bomb scanners according to schedule, and despite this knowledge, had approved of payments for the bomb scanners to the airport contractor (the ITO jointventure) and bomb-scanner sub-contractor (Patriot Business Consultants).[8] The Opposition claimed that THB 1 billion (USD $25 million) could have been saved if the bomb scanners were purchased directly from GE InVision rather than going through the two local contractors. The Opposition did not win the censure motion, and subsequent investigations cleared Suriya Jungrungreangkit of any wrongdoing.[9] The scandal delayed the opening of Suvarnabhumi Airport by over a year.

In 2008, The Nation admitted that its reports of corruption were incorrect.[3]

Suvarnabhumi City

In October 2005, the government of Thaksin Shinawatra floated a proposal to combine several districts around Suvarnabhumi Airport into a new province, to be managed as a special administration zone.[10] These districts would include Samut Prakan's Bang Sao Thong sub-district and Bang Phli district as well as Lat Krabang and Prawet districts of Bangkok. The new province would allow speedier large scale investments in infrastructure by enabling the government to bypass administrative and budgetary constraints for the estimated THB 500 billion (USD $12.5 billion) in public and private sector. The new zone, to be known as "Nakhon Suvarnabhumi" (Suvarnabhumi City) would cover 521 square kilometres (roughly the size of Singapore) and is currently home to about 462,000 people. In 2006 the Cabinet approved in principle a draft Nakhon Suvarnabhumi Bill prepared by the Interior Ministry. The Council of State will then review it, followed by a series of public hearings, before the bill is submitted to the House of Representatives.

There were anonymous allegations that the proposed establishment of the new zone would cause property values to increase, and that government politicians had bought large plots of land in speculation.[11] However, the opening of the airport caused property prices to fall 40-50% in an estimated 4,000 rai of land surrounding the airport from 2005 to 2006 due to increased noise levels.[12] An anonymous source had earlier noted to The Nation newspaper that "My friend told me that a politician's wife had bought 4,000 rai from a developer... The transaction was wrapped up in the first quarter of this year [2006]." The source also noted that prominent developers like Land & Houses, Quality Houses, Property Perfect, Supalai, LPN Develop-ment, SC Asset Corp, as well as the Jungrungreangkit and Mahagitsiri families owned large tranches in the proposed zone. Several developers denied that their ownership of land was related in any way to the proposal and noted that the properties were bought years before.

The plans for Suvarnabhumi City were largely scrapped by post-coup Finance Minister Pridiyathorn Devakula.

Post-coup Investigations

Purging of management

The Royal Thai Army overthrew the Thaksin government in September 2006, using the allegedly shoddy construction of the airport as one of the justifications for its coup.

After the coup, numerous public accusations were made that construction standards of the airport were sub-standard and that cracks were appearing in the runway. Junta leader Saprang Kalayanamitr forced AoT President Chotisak Asapaviriya forced to resign and also dismissed the Directors of Suvarnabhumi Airport and AoT Commercial Operations.[13][14]

Junta-led investigations

A junta-appointed panel of engineers assigned to inspect the airport noted that damage to the airport was "minute," and "common." This was contrary to public accusations that the airport was seriously damaged after only 4 months of operations. A spokesman for British Airways, also said that "everything is normal," and that "We haven't heard any complaints from the staff."[15] A two-week investigation led by Tortrakul Yomnak, a chief engineer for Airports of Thailand, found that the runway was safe, and that cracks could be repaired in as little as a few hours. At the beginning of the investigation, Tortrakul had warned that the airport might need to be closed for three years.[16]

AoT-led investigations

The Assistant Secretary-General of the junta was appointed Chairman of the Board at Airports of Thailand. He initiated a comprehensive study of problems at the airport. The completed study showed that the cost of fixing 60 identified problems at the airport would be less than 1% of the total airline cost and the problems could be fixed in up to four to five years. Dr. Narupol Chaiyut, a member of a committee overseeing service problems at the new airport, estimated that 70% of the problems would be fixed within 2007.[17]

Engineering Institute of Thailand investigations

The Engineering Institute of Thailand conducted investigations at the airport in late 2006 after signs of distress were spotted at several locations in Suvarnabhumi's taxiways and taxilanes. Rutting was found in five of the six taxilanes and one of the six taxiways. Plastic deformation of the asphalt wearing course was observed near the takeoff position of the runway. However, the investigators noted that plastic deformation at this location was a common phenomenon and only routine maintenance was required to repair the distress. Aside from this surface distortion, both runways were in good structural condition.

Further investigations found that taxilane and taxiway rutting was caused by separation of the asphalt binder from the aggregate surface due to prolonged water infiltration into the asphalt concrete base course, a phenomenon known as "stripping." The 23 cm thick base course is the top-most layer of the tarmac. Core samples indicated that the concrete base course material contained the correct job mix and aggregate gradation. Below the base course are the binder course, the wearing course, and the cement-treated base.

Detailed investigations found that water seepage was evident along the rims of the expansion joints in the cement-tested base, indicating that a large quantity of water was still trapped in the sand blanket (the bottom-most layer of the tarmac). It was found that water trapped in the sand blanket was fully confined with no connection to the pavement areas of the airport. A later investigation by the AoT identified several potential reasons for the trapped water in the sand blanket. The AoT's findings were disputed by several experts.

The Engineering Institute of Thailand sent a formal warning to AoT in November 2006 about the urgent need to drain water from beneath the tarmac, and the need for immediate action. "The AOT did nothing about the problem," Suebsak Promboon of the EIT noted. "The situation might not have become this bad if the water had been drained then."

In a public statement on 15 February 2007, the EIT again strongly recommended that trapped water should be drained out urgently to minimise the potential spread of cracks. Karun Chandrarangsu, president of the Engineering Institute of Thailand noted, "Suvarnabhumi is like a patient in a coma who continues to suffer from severe bleeding. Stopping the blood flow now is more urgent and important than debating what caused the injury."[18][19]

Repairs and further criticisms

Prime Minister Surayud Chulanont and AoT Chairman General Saprang Kalayanamitr refused to authorize repairs on the airport tarmac. Suebsak Promboon, a senior foundation engineer and a member of the Tortrakul Yomnak-led airport tarmac inspection panel, accused the AOT of refusing to take action to solve the problems at the airport.[20]

Critics noted that junta-led investigations were unlikely to reveal an impartial picture of the airport's shortcomings. "Problems are normal for any new airport. In our case it's made more complex because everybody wants to run down the former prime minister", noted Sumet Jumsai, a leading Thai architect.[21] Other leading engineers were sharply divided over the root causes of problems faced by the new airport.[22]

See also

References

  1. ^ New airport, new province, new government HQ?
  2. ^ International Herald Tribune, Thailand's airport imbroglio grows, 2 February 2007
  3. ^ a b The Nation, Nation Wrong About Thaksin Corruption, 6 November 2008
  4. ^ The Nation, Engineers beat their breasts over airport debacle, 11 February 2007
  5. ^ a b c Channel NewsAsia, Corruption scandals delay Thailand's massive Suvarnabhumi Airport", 23 August 2005
  6. ^ AirportTechnology.com, Suvarnabhumi Airport
  7. ^ The Nation, "Suvarnabhumi: Contractor warns over airport delay", 7 May 2005
  8. ^ Deutsche Presse-Agentur, Opposition grills Thai government over airport scandal, 25 June 2006
  9. ^ The Bangkok Post, More To Come, 14 June 2005
  10. ^ Institute for Public Policy Studies Democracy Monitor, Suvanabhumi Metropolis
  11. ^ The Nation, City plan could see prices double, 26 June 2006
  12. ^ The Nation, Noise, floods cut land prices, 14 October 2006
  13. ^ Bangkok Recorder, Airport president resigns, 3 February 2007
  14. ^ ETNA, Thailand's new international airport head steps down, 2 February 2007
  15. ^ Bangkok Post, Suvarnabhumi: No cracks, minor damage, 2 February 2007
  16. ^ Bangkok Post, Suvarnabhumi runway declared safe, 12 February 2007
  17. ^ Bangkok Post, B1bn needed to fix terminal problems over four to five years, 16 February 2007
  18. ^ The Nation, 'Can we get to work please?', 17 February 2007
  19. ^ Bangkok Post, Distress in the tarmac, 11 March 2007
  20. ^ The Nation, AOT staff stalling urgent repairs: engineer, 23 February 2007
  21. ^ Asian Times Online, Cracks appear in Thai aviation-hub hopes, 7 February 2007
  22. ^ The Nation, Engineers unable to agree on root cause of airport cracks, 10 February 2007

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