Pubdate: Thu, 03 Apr 2003 Source: Straits Times (Singapore) Copyright: 2003 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. Contact: http://straitstimes.asia1.com.sg/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/429 Author: Nirmal Ghosh THAILAND IN HOT PURSUIT OF DRUG MONEY One Trafficker Has $20.6m In Various Accounts, Including $5m With A S'pore Bank, Says Anti-Money Laundering Office BANGKOK - Thailand is tracking down drug money in bank accounts across the region, including Singapore, as part of the government's war on drugs. The Anti-Money Laundering Office (AMLO) is given new powers to help trace and seize money used by terrorists to finance operations. Under Thailand's money laundering laws, the AMLO is empowered to freeze drug-trade related money both at home and abroad. According to reports, it is investigating several drug rings which may have money stashed in accounts in financial centres such as Hongkong, Singapore and Luxembourg. Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra has ordered the AMLO to go after the assets of drug dealers as a means of getting at the kingpins of the drug trade who, unlike peddlers, do not operate on the streets and are therefore harder to catch. The powers of the AMLO will be beefed up, said Deputy Prime Minister Vishanu Kruangam. New legislation to be introduced in Parliament shortly would widen the scope of money laundering laws to cover money linked to terrorism, gambling, exploitation of national resources, human trafficking, arms smuggling and intellectual property rights. AMLO secretary-general Peeraphan Prempooti told journalists: 'The AMLO is prepared to seize drug money regardless of where it is being stashed.' The AMLO is also pursuing older cases including one involving a drug trafficker, Prasert Laonapharung, arrested in 1995 but only recently discovered to be holding 500 million baht (S$20.6 million) in various bank accounts, including US$2.9 million (S$5.1 million) with a bank in Singapore. On Monday, Prime Minister Thaksin said the authorities would increase the pressure in the final phase of his war on drugs to 'unprecedented levels' in following the trail of drug money and seizing ill-gotten gains. The effort would be expanded to include seizing 'war weapons' and assets financing the drug trade. In an editorial on Tuesday, the Bangkok Post said: 'The latest moves to try to choke the money supply to terrorists deserve strong support from the business community and many members of the public who must help in order to make it a success.' Meanwhile, Thai police said more than 2,000 people had been killed in the crackdown on drugs as the country entered the third month of its war on drugs. While police are unable to say precisely how many of the killings were drug-related, the national murder tally has been widely used as an indicator of the number of deaths resulting from the crackdown. The authorities claim that many of the deaths were murders carried out by drug gang members to protect themselves from prosecution. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens