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Three Turn Themselves in as Probe Involving Thai Princess' Kin Widens


FILE - Thailand's Crown Prince Maha Vajiralongkorn (L) and Royal Consort Princess Srirasmi watch the royal plowing ceremony in Bangkok.
FILE - Thailand's Crown Prince Maha Vajiralongkorn (L) and Royal Consort Princess Srirasmi watch the royal plowing ceremony in Bangkok.

Two Thai army officers and a civilian have answered a police summons, police said, in a widening corruption probe that has also led to the arrest of high-ranking policemen and relatives of Princess Srirasmi, the wife of Thailand's Crown Prince.

The investigation comes at a time of heightened sensitivity surrounding the palace. The revered but ailing King Bhumibol Adulyadej, 86, was admitted to Bangkok's Siriraj hospital in October and underwent an operation to remove his gallbladder.

Last week, some senior police officers and civilians were arrested in the crackdown into alleged police graft including charges ranging from bribery to defaming the monarchy.

Among them were three people with the Akrapongpreecha surname, the royal name bestowed on Srirasmi's family when she married Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn in 2001, police said.

Witthaya Theskhunthot, a civilian, and Royal Thai Army officers Sergeant Nathakorn Yasri and Sergeant Thiraphong Chochampi, were the latest suspects to surrender to authorities.

“Altogether three people turned themselves in,” Police Major General Chanthep Saesawet, deputy commissioner of the Metropolitan Police Bureau, told Reuters. “The two army officers are being detained by the army and one civilian surrendered to police on Monday night at a television broadcasting station.”

The men turned themselves in three days after Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn asked the government to strip his wife Srirasmi's family of the royal name.

Police say Lieutenant General Pongpat Chayapan, a former head of Thailand's Central Investigation Bureau, was the group's ringleader. Pongpat and several others were also charged under Thailand's harsh lese-majeste laws for allegedly citing the monarchy for personal benefit.

The suspects held in the case have not been allowed to comment publicly on the charges.

The group faces a slew of charges including money-laundering, oil smuggling and other crimes. Police last week displayed slides showing antique Buddhist statues, gold bars, stacks of cash and cars seized at safehouses allegedly linked to some of the suspects.

There is mounting concern over the health of King Bhumibol who is seen by many as the father of the nation - a unifying figure who has intervened in the past in times of political crisis.

The king remained silent during the latest crisis which began last year, when the government of former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra tried to push through a broad amnesty law that would have pardoned her brother, exiled former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra. Thaksin was ousted in a 2006 putsch and faces a two-year jail term for graft.

The designated heir to the throne is Vajiralongkorn, a fighter pilot who has in recent years assumed many of his father's ceremonial duties. Srirasmi is his third wife and the mother of Prince Dipangkorn Rasmijoti, the presumed heir to the throne after his father.

Thailand's laws protecting senior members of the monarchy from insult are among the strictest in the world. Article 112 of the criminal code makes it a crime to defame, insult or threaten the king, queen, heir-apparent or the regent.

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