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Temple returns HK$161m donation after accusations of embezzlement

GarvenDreis

Alfrescian (Inf)
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Temple returns HK$161m donation after accusations of embezzlement


PUBLISHED : Tuesday, 17 March, 2015, 11:23pm
UPDATED : Tuesday, 17 March, 2015, 11:23pm

Agence France-Presse in Bangkok

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Buddhist monks (front) light candles and pray during a ceremony at the Dhammakaya Temple in Bangkok on March 4, 2015 on the occasion of Makha Bucha day. Photo: AFP

A Buddhist temple at the heart of a bitter corruption scandal in Thailand has agreed to return a donation worth the 684 million baht (HK$161million) in a case that has prompted calls for greater scrutiny over religious institutions in the kingdom.

The Dhammakaya temple, a vast ultra-modern complex near Bangkok considered one of the richest monasteries in Thailand, will repay the funds donated by the former chairman of the Klongchan Credit Union Cooperative after he was accused of embezzlement.

"We have agreed to return 684 million baht to be paid in six instalments between March and August [to the cooperative]," Sermcheep Samphan, a lawyer for the temple, said on Monday.

He added that, in exchange, the cooperative - a financial institution based on the outskirts of Bangkok - had agreed not to file any criminal charges against the temple, which has denied all knowledge of any unethical sourcing of donations.

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Suppachai Srisupa-aksorn, the former chairman, admitted only that he just borrowed money from the cooperatives to donate to the temple and its abbot. Photo: Screengrab via Youtube

The repayments "will come from donations from people who have faith in Dhammakaya", he said.

The scandal has outraged many in the Buddhist-majority nation in recent weeks, raising concerns over how temples raise donations and the commercialisation of Buddhism.

The case has also shone a spotlight on the practice of encouraging devotees, who believe in reincarnation, to make donations proportional to the size of good fortune they hope to achieve in their next life - sparking calls for authorities to better regulate religious institutions.

Thai monks have been hit by a series of scandals in recent years including corruption as well as drug-taking, drinking, gambling and visiting prostitutes.

In September 2013 authorities said they had seized US$800,000 worth of assets, including a Porsche and a Mercedes-Benz, from a monk who was disrobed for a trip in a private jet.


 
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