Leicester City Owner To Be Sued For Corruption , What He Did Will Shock You

Leicester City Owner To Be Sued For Corruption , What He Did Will Shock You

Thai anti-corruption official on Friday said he
is suing King Power, the duty-free giant that
owns Leicester City Football Club, for hundreds of millions of dollars over the alleged underpayment of taxes.

Charnchai Issarasenarak, who leads a junta-
appointed anti-graft panel, accuses King
Power of under-declaring revenue to avoid
paying a 15 percent levy agreed in a 2006
contract to operate in Thailand's airports.

The allegations amount to a rare attack on an
ultra-rich company that dominates Thailand's
duty-free industry and is run by one of the
kingdom's most well-connected billionaires.

"Based on the contract... in the first five years
King Power must share 15 percent of revenue
with the government," Charnchai told AFP.
But he alleges the firm colluded with Airports
of Thailand (AOT) to slash its declared revenue from 2008 onwards "citing sluggish economic conditions" to avoid paying the full sum.

Speaking later to reporters, Charnchai said he
was suing on behalf of minority shareholders
in AOT who were affected by the alleged
corruption which caused "more than 10 billion
baht ($300 million) in damages".

He confirmed King Power's founder Vichai
Srivaddhanaprabha would be named a suspect
in his latest lawsuit - one of five cases his
legal team is preparing against the duty free
behemoth.

An earlier suit - also brought by Charnchai -
accuses 14 AOT and customs officials, as
well as King Power executives, of colluding to
collect only three percent of the duty free giant's annual revenue instead of the contracted 15 percent.

"That caused some 14 billion baht ($319 million) damage to the state," he said, explaining the legal move is not motivated by "personal conflict, it's for the public interest".

- Bad publicity -

A criminal corruption court will decide whether to accept the cases in coming days.

Airports of Thailand has denied any wrongdoing. "AOT has managed the contract carefully whilst ensuring state and shareholders' benefits," it said in a July 7 statement.

King Power declined to comment, instead
referring AFP to the AOT statement. But the
legal moves will be unwelcome publicity for
King Power and its shrewd, influential billionaire founder Vichai. The polo-playing Vichai frequently hob-nobs with celebrities and the kingdom's mega-rich business elite.

His reputation for canny decision-making
surged following the 2016 English Premier
League championship win by minnows
Leicester City. Vichai has deftly tip-toed
around Thailand's treacherous politics in
recent years, overseeing surging profits at his
King Power empire.

He has amassed an estimated fortune of $2.9
billion since establishing King Power in 1989
- starting with a single shop in Bangkok.

King Power won the duty-free concession at
Bangkok's cavernous Suvarnabhumi airport in
2006, and with it a captive market of tens of
millions of travellers.

The firm now runs a near monopoly on duty-
free sales in Thailand's main airports, plus a
satellite mall in Bangkok favoured by Chinese
tourists.

In 2007, a year after ex-premier Thaksin
Shinawatra, Manchester City's former owner,
was dumped from office in a coup, Vichai saw
off legal moves to break his duty-free monopoly.
He now belongs to the royalist establishment that toppled Thaksin. His familyreceived its royal surname in 2013 - a highly symbolic gesture in kingdom where connections count.

Source : PUNCHNG

Comments

Keep up to date with our latest articles and uploads...