*The End of the Blue Diamond Affair
<https://email.mg2.substack.com/c/eJxNkk2TojAQhn-N3IYKCZ-HHKwZrZUVHHd0cPZCBdIwUQgWCYv46zfoHjbVSarfdKer-umSaai7fqLXTmlrPnI9XYFKGFUDWkNvDQr6XHDquSFyELI4dbkTeqElVF71AC0TDdX9ANZ1KBpRMi06OSdgEhHX-qYFVNwLK86DMPQwq9wIFSQozUI8RIX_LMsGLkCWQOEP9FMnwWrot9ZXtSDLBV4bG8fRZkowBVILCY1ddq2Rr2aD5C9d9VI0A7xwwdrO-KyqmOgXZK27C8gFeYMpdkr8OZ1wc9mcOyd9q8fksBy3r_FYkBT909HusHLSe4LT11GwbI2MdkvPeyc9bFB6Pnom_lqSROxEPPJso5Nz4iX3vTD63fgPff5ve4qbryxFLIuGjUT26jd5_wD_FL9__fil9G17O37uazjuVPwzLsNgma1OeNpmw31lCYoRng07pumeb2O7rCAgEDoRwswvI2Y7fSD9QbGFi9oa22oolGblZW6L1VPRtGA6VUPfmYB6pvR4MZByc7eDFHrKQbKiAf7kp59T8CCa1yChN9PBc6ap47ueh13fiyKfPHkZwG7keAHxXcuU5p3JkvR_Pn8BZ4fLtg>*

A three-decade scandal dies as Thailand and Saudi Arabia make up

<https://email.mg2.substack.com/c/eJxNkE1uxCAMhU8z7CYKvwkLFt30GpEDToaWQASkVW5fMtlUsrARth_vs1BxTfk0eyqVXMdUzx1NxN8SsFbM5CiYJ--MFGNP-544Ixwd5Uh8mZaMuIEPpuYDyX7MwVuoPsVrgHHNBXkZB8uAi7SWc0CBdhgHxZWG0Wk9K6dvWTicx2jR4A_mM0Ukwbxq3cuDfzzYZ4tyzKWC_e5s2tp1z2nxAVvFe8rp8yu94nPGXF8YCkbiDevZFYy2f0vVsc4uOHAcqe4ZKKuho3mI6ijwEP22su6_AsnGhw3bphVzag3rZfT90nxOLW9H9PWcMMIc0N0I6g3yDWVaMWJugN0E1VAlpGRCSa0Vvy03RkJTOXAlSJN2qU1FA8VDU60-YvgDozaMow>


<https://email.mg2.substack.com/c/eJxNkE1uxCAMhU8z7CYKvwkLFt30GpEDToaWQASkVW5fMtlUsrARth_vs1BxTfk0eyqVXMdUzx1NxN8SsFbM5CiYJ--MFGNP-544Ixwd5Uh8mZaMuIEPpuYDyX7MwVuoPsVrgHHNBXkZB8uAi7SWc0CBdhgHxZWG0Wk9K6dvWTicx2jR4A_mM0Ukwbxq3cuDfzzYZ4tyzKWC_e5s2tp1z2nxAVvFe8rp8yu94nPGXF8YCkbiDevZFYy2f0vVsc4uOHAcqe4ZKKuho3mI6ijwEP22su6_AsnGhw3bphVzag3rZfT90nxOLW9H9PWcMMIc0N0I6g3yDWVaMWJugN0E1VAlpGRCSa0Vvy03RkJTOXAlSJN2qU1FA8VDU60-YvgDozaMow>



John Berthelsen
<https://email.mg2.substack.com/c/eJxNkE1uxCAMhU8z7CYKvwkLFt30GpEDToaWQASkVW5fMtlUsrARth_vs1BxTfk0eyqVXMdUzx1NxN8SsFbM5CiYJ--MFGNP-544Ixwd5Uh8mZaMuIEPpuYDyX7MwVuoPsVrgHHNBXkZB8uAi7SWc0CBdhgHxZWG0Wk9K6dvWTicx2jR4A_mM0Ukwbxq3cuDfzzYZ4tyzKWC_e5s2tp1z2nxAVvFe8rp8yu94nPGXF8YCkbiDevZFYy2f0vVsc4uOHAcqe4ZKKuho3mI6ijwEP22su6_AsnGhw3bphVzag3rZfT90nxOLW9H9PWcMMIc0N0I6g3yDWVaMWJugN0E1VAlpGRCSa0Vvy03RkJTOXAlSJN2qU1FA8VDU60-YvgDozaMow>

Feb 22



One of the most enduring and spectacular mysteries in Asia - which involve
the Thai and Saudi Arabian royal houses, several murders, and the theft of
jewels that include a magnificent 50 carat blue diamond - may have been put
to rest with the January visit of Thailand’s prime minister Prayuth
Cha-ocha to Riyadh, according to multiple diplomatic and other sources in
Bangkok.

While there is speculation in Bangkok that the agreement, under which the
two countries agreed to exchange ambassadors and normalize relations after
three decades of estrangement, will allow for the return of the famed
diamond, other sources say the Saudis may have decided the benefits of
normalization outweigh their continuing anger over the gems’ disappearance.
The sources say King Maha Vajiralongkorn played a role in the negotiations.

In what has become known as the Blue Diamond Affair, widespread rumors in
Bangkok are that the gem was presented to Queen Sirikit, the wife of the
late King Bhumibol Adulyadej, by top officials of the Thai police, which
would explain why the Saudis saw the affair as going to the very top in
Thailand and wasn’t just some heist by rogue cops. The queen, now 90,
suffered a massive stroke some time ago and is unresponsive. Rightly or
wrongly, Sirikit acquired the nickname the Blue Diamond Queen because of a
belief she had the stone.

“When Bhumibol celebrated his Diamond Jubilee inviting all the monarchs in
the world to the party in Bangkok, the Saudi monarchy refused to send
someone,” said a former diplomat, apparently because of Riyadh’s belief the
royal family had the gems.

“The person who was in possession of the cursed jewelry is in a vegetative
state and would have no qualms in having it taken away and return to the
rightful owner,” said another well-placed source. “The return of the
jewelry is peanuts compared to the benefits Thailand can reap, e.g.
normalization of relations, return of Thai workers, using the Saudis to
intercede with the US and the West to go easy on a partial boycott of
Thailand due to the military coup and violations of human rights, use Saudi
influence to solve restive South, strengthen the Thai monarchy, etc.”

The gems were stolen in 1989 by a Thai gardener named Kriangkrai Techamong,
who is said to have propped a ladder against the wall of the palace of
Prince Faisal bin Fahd, ascended to the bedroom and made off with 91 kg of
jewelry and other valuables including the 50-carat Blue Diamond, one of the
world’s most expensive gems. By comparison, the 42.5-carat Hope Diamond in
the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC is worth US$400 million.

According to widespread reporting both in Thailand and the Middle East,
Kriangkrai hid the jewels in a vacuum cleaner bag and shipped them to his
home in Thailand, where he began selling them off for what was described as
a pittance. A Bangkok jeweler, Santhi Sithanakan, learned of the sales and
bought most of the gems from Kriangkrai at a fraction of their value.
Authorities were onto them quickly and Kriangkrai was arrested and
ultimately sentenced to seven years in prison although he only served three
after he cooperated and confessed. He has since become a monk to atone for
his sin.

A Royal Thai Police
<https://email.mg2.substack.com/c/eJwlUMtuhDAM_JrNEeUNHHLopeeq6j0yiWGjQoKS0BV_37BIli0_RuMZBxWXlE-zp1LJlWw9dzQRX2XFWjGTo2C2wRslB8ooJd5IzwY1kFDsnBE3CKup-UCyH9MaHNSQ4gXgYhSSPA3OmvKZiUkpx5wA4fXMkdNeaZgEm29aOHzA6NDgH-YzRSSreda6l4f4ePDPFhi7V_gNO_oAXcpLG119K9_phNX-PCHYr9ReQBIMp_wKztrTSne8czP2Agc2Ug7ajdCx3Ed9FHhIui28K8dUKrjfzqWNZBPWDQvGBXNqB8ul8r1pIm2r2xFDPS1GmFb0t_56u_h2xC4YMTd3vYVqmJZKcanVOGpx620GyZGpXmhJGrVPDRUNlACNtYaI6z_R3Iuu>
investigation
team headed by Lieutenant-General
<https://email.mg2.substack.com/c/eJwlUMtuxCAM_Jrl1ggIEHLg0Et76T9EBJwsagIRmK7y9yVZybLlx2g84yzCmvJpjlSQXGnC8wAT4VU2QIRMaoE8BW-k0JRRSrwRnmmpSSjTkgF2GzaDuQI56rwFZzGkeAF4P_aCPI2XavRUzmIeFu6kppo554aFDVo71k5uWlt9gOjAwB_kM0Ugm3kiHuXRfz74VwuI3Sv8hgN8sF3KaxtdfSs_ASpCtBE_viFCthsJhlN-BWfta6k63rkFhh40Gym3yo22Y3mIqhb7EHRfeVfqXNC6386lnWQTth0KxBVyagfrJfPeNJVTq3uNAc-psc4b-LcB-LbxtmRa708Q_GTRMCWk5ELJcVT9W3BzSIxMDr0SpFH71FDR2BJsY8UQYfsHFXWLxg>
Chalor
Kerdthes flew the stolen gems back to Saudi Arabia. But the Saudis quickly
discovered that the Blue Diamond was missing and that about half of the
gems returned were fake. According to a report by British journalist Andrew
Marshall, rumors spread in the local press that charity gala photos
captured high-ranking government wives wearing diamond necklaces resembling
those stolen from the Saudi palace.

The Saudi efforts to recover the jewels set off a round of murders in
Bangkok including a Saudi diplomat who was found murdered on January 4,
1989 in the Silom district of Bangkok. Three other diplomats were killed in
Bangkok’s Yannawa district and in 1990, yet another Saudi was believed to
have died in the search for the gems. He was Mohammad al-Ruwaili, a
businessman close to the Saudi royal family who traveled to Bangkok to
investigate but disappeared. His body has never been recovered.

Newspapers across the Middle East accused the Thai police of the murders
and the theft of the gems. Indeed, Chalor, the police general who flew the
fake gems to Saudi Arabia, was later convicted and sentenced to death for
ordering the murder of the wife and son of a gem dealer allegedly involved
in the affair although his sentence was reduced to 50 years imprisonment by
King Bhumibol Adulyadej
<https://email.mg2.substack.com/c/eJwlkE2OwyAMhU9TlhEQQsiCxcxiroEccFOmBCJ-psrth7SShWXAfn6fhYpbyqc-UqnkOkw9D9QRXyVgrZhJK5iNd3oSijJKidPCMTUp4ou5Z8QdfNA1NyRHW4O3UH2KVwMfl1GQh14QxpmiUlwy7sCqVS0zo3eGsOLaJ75loTmP0aLGP8xnikiCftR6lNv4deM_PTAOL__0BzoPQ8pbv7rqnr4fbfdrCubLtXCCw1_iNaf8Cs761pMc-GDvOI-o2EI5SLvAwPIcZStwE3Tf-FDaWirY52DTTrL2YceCccOc-oftsvl-6S5Nz3uLvp4GI6wB3QdA_WB8IzEbRswdrzNQNZNimriQ07LI8WO4ExILm-ZRCtKlXepdUUPx0FWrjxj-AYTUjDY>
on
the late king's 84th birthday. Six other police officials were also
convicted of involvement and sentenced to prison.

But the gems never turned up. Eventually, the Saudis stopped issuing work
visas for Thais and discouraged their citizens from visiting Bangkok
although robed Saudis continued to visit the fleshpots in the city. With
diplomatic missions downgraded to the chargé d'affaires
<https://email.mg2.substack.com/c/eJwlkN2KhDAMhZ9mein2V73oxTKwr1FiG50y2kp_dvDtt44QckjacDifhYJrTKc-Yi7kaqacB-qAn7xhKZhIzZiMd1qKsad9T5wWjo5yJD6bJSHu4DddUkVy1HnzFoqP4TpgfOKCvLQbZjEMdgHLmwAXoHrKpBIwUsuX8baF6jwGixr_MJ0xINn0q5QjP_jPg_22wtB9_Nsf6Dx0Ma1tdc1Nni-4Rvnkrf1MxjVhAywL-ISZeM16dhWjLYFUHevsggPHkU49A2Un6GgagqoZHqLfV9blOucC9t3ZuJOk_bZjxrBiiu3DekX-vrTEpulegy-nwQDzhu6GUW6kXzxmxYCpoXYGiqZKSMmEktOk-B2-0RITlQNXgjRrF9tV0JA9NNfiA27_HVeNzQ>
level,
the number of Thai workers in Saudi Arabia, particularly from Thailand’s
restive Muslim south, fell from 150,000-200,000 in 1989 to just 1,350 in
2021, employed mainly as welders, technicians, and household staff. The
cost to Thailand was billions of baht in remittances.

“Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai's strong emphasis on putting everything
firmly in the past reveals the real impetus for this sudden rapprochement
between Thailand and Saudi Arabia after so many years,” said a
knowledgeable western observer in Bangkok. “This is an alliance of
desperation, reflecting that both the Thai king and the Saudi crown prince
need all the friends they can get because both lack credibility and
popularity with global audiences as well as their own people.”

Letting past bygones be bygones and rebuilding a political relationship
might be helpful for both sides at some time in the future, the source
said. “Prime Minister Prayuth was just sent to sign the deal that was
already concluded at higher levels, reflecting his role as a glorified
messenger of the palace rather than as an official who had anything to do
with this so-called ‘success’ of Thai foreign policy.”

But, he said, it’s unlikely that the floodgates will now magically open for
Thai migrant workers to go to Saudi Arabia. Migrant workers from many
other countries around the world have already taken the place that Thais
were forced to leave 30 years ago.

Nonetheless, Tourism and Sports Minister Phiphat Ratchakitprakarn told
local media the government expects to attract at least 200,000 Saudis to
Thailand and generate Bt20 billion in revenue in 2022. Although the Saudi
government only allowed its citizens to visit Thailand for “medical
treatment and official business and governmental affairs,” with pleasure
visits strictly prohibited, as many as 37,000 Saudis in 2019, generating
about Bt3.2 billion in revenue, he said.

“The visit of Prayuth to Saudi welcomes a new era in this bilateral
relationship. I assumed that the Saudis gave up and wanted to go ahead with
normalization, particularly reconnecting with the Thai monarchy under
Vajiralongkorn,” said Pavin Chachavalpongpun, a Thai professor at Kyoto
University in Japan and an opponent of the regime. “At the end of the day,
the two monarchs share ruthless tactics in dealing with their opponents,
hence the illiberal standpoint seemed to jell them together. Surely, there
are other benefits, economic and tourist, to be gained.”

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