logo
Misbehaving monks: Sex scandal shakes Thai Buddhist faithful

Misbehaving monks: Sex scandal shakes Thai Buddhist faithful

France 2418-07-2025
Thai police this week arrested a woman accused of bedding at least 11 monks in violation of their vows of celibacy, before blackmailing them with thousands of secretly taken photos of their trysts.
The monks are said to have paid nearly $12 million, funnelled out of their monasteries funded by donations from laypeople hoping to increase their merit and prospects for reincarnation.
The scandal provoked outrage over hypocrisy in the monkhood, concern their status shields them from scrutiny, and soul-searching across society about the role of religion.
"I'm not involved in the religion like I used to be," 33-year-old motorbike taxi driver Mongkol Sudathip told AFP. "I don't have full respect for it anymore."
King Maha Vajiralongkorn has cancelled invitations to more than 80 monks who had been due to attend his upcoming 73rd birthday celebrations, citing "inappropriate behaviour that caused mental distress among the Thai people".
'Splurging attitude'
Theravada Buddhism has been the spiritual backbone of Thai identity for more than two millennia, and still shapes national laws banning alcohol on religious holidays and protecting sacred objects.
Thai men are traditionally expected to ordain as monks at least once in their lives for a period lasting as short as a few weeks or as long as decades.
The clergy are bound by 227 strict rules, including a ban on masturbation, touching women and even handling objects directly from them.
Monks traditionally survive on alms, food offerings and a modest $170 monthly stipend, but some pocket fees for lectures, blessings and ceremonies -- blurring the line between faith and fortune.
In a TV interview, the woman at the heart of the scandal said she had developed a "splurging attitude" as her monk lovers lavished her with shopping trips worth up to $90,000 a day.
Motorcycle taxi driver Mongkol said he now prefers to donate to hospitals or schools for underprivileged children. "It feels more meaningful than giving money to temples," he told AFP.
This month's scandal is not the first to rock the monkhood.
In 2017, police raided Wat Dhammakaya temple north of Bangkok, arresting its former abbot over allegations of laundering $33 million in public donations.
This May, police held another monk in the capital over allegations of embezzling nearly $10 million from a temple for an online gambling network.
Buddhism scholar Danai Preechapermprasit said repeated scandals -- especially among senior monks -- have "shaken people to the core".
"People question whether donations are used for spiritual significance or personal desire," he told AFP.
"I think Thailand has reached a point where it's difficult for monks to even walk down the street."
A powerful lawmaker has pledged tighter regulations within three months -- including mandatory donation disclosures and laws treating monk misconduct as a criminal offence.
"This case does not represent Buddhism as a whole," said national police chief Kitrat Panphet on Thursday, pledging a new task force to probe misbehaving monks.
"It's about a few individuals doing wrong," he said.
'Never lose faith'
In Buddhist tradition monks are viewed as the Buddha's spiritual heirs, entrusted with preserving and passing on his teachings.
But at Wat Bowonniwet in Bangkok -- one of Thailand's most revered temples -- only 26 monks were ordained this year, a steep drop from nearly 100 before the Covid-19 pandemic.
A monk there, speaking to AFP anonymously, blamed societal changes after the pandemic, which forced people into isolation -- saying nowadays "people prefer to live outside the temple life".
But independent Buddhism expert Jaturong Jongarsa said temples are increasingly being treated as "a garbage dump" -- where families send drug addicts or LGBTQ youth to be "corrected".
"Temples are no longer seen as the sacred spaces they once were," he told AFP. "People send their problems to the temple and hope they'll go away."
Still, not all Thais have lost faith.
Camphun Parimiphut, a 52-year-old security guard from Maha Sarakham in Thailand's northeast, said: "Buddhism is about the teachings, not the individuals who fail it".
Because of corruption scandals he now avoids giving money to monks -- preferring to donate only food. But his devotion remains steadfast.
"You can lose faith in monks," he said. "But never lose trust in Buddhist teachings. They still teach us how to live a good life."
© 2025 AFP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Civilians wounded as Cambodia, Thailand trade fire in fresh border clashes
Civilians wounded as Cambodia, Thailand trade fire in fresh border clashes

France 24

timea day ago

  • France 24

Civilians wounded as Cambodia, Thailand trade fire in fresh border clashes

The neighbours are locked in a bitter spat over an area known as the Emerald Triangle, where the borders of both countries and Laos meet, and which is home to several ancient temples. The squabble has dragged on for decades, flaring into bloody miliary clashes more than 15 years ago and again in May, when a Cambodian solider was killed in a firefight. Fresh fighting erupted on Thursday morning near two temples on the border between the Thai province of Surin and Cambodia's Oddar Meanchey. "The Thai military violated the territorial integrity of the Kingdom of Cambodia by launching an armed assault on Cambodian forces stationed to defend the nation's sovereign territory," defence ministry spokeswoman Maly Socheata said in a statement. "In response, the Cambodian armed forces exercised their legitimate right to self-defense, in full accordance with international law, to repel the Thai incursion and protect Cambodia's sovereignty and territorial integrity." The Thai army blamed Cambodian solders for firing first, and later accused them of a "targeted attack on civilians", saying two BM-21 rockets had hit a community in Surin's Kap Choeng district, wounding three people. According to the Thai army, the clashes began around 7:35 am (0035 GMT) when a unit guarding Ta Muen temple heard a Cambodian drone overhead. Later, six armed Cambodian soldiers, including one carrying a rocket-propelled grenade, approached a barbed-wired fence in front of the Thai post, the army said. Thai soldiers shouted to warn them, the army said, but around 8:20 am, Cambodian forces opened fire toward the eastern side of the temple, about 200 metres from the Thai base. Thailand's acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai said "the situation requires careful handling, and we must act in accordance with international law". "We will do our best to protect our sovereignty," he said. Thailand's embassy in Phnom Penh urged its nationals to leave Cambodia "as soon as possible" unless they had urgent reasons to remain, in a Facebook post. Long-running row The violence came hours after Thailand expelled the Cambodian ambassador and recalled its own envoy in protest after five members of a Thai military patrol were wounded by a landmine. Wechayachai said an investigation by the Thai military found evidence that Cambodia had laid new landmines in the disputed border area -- a claim denied by Phnom Penh. On Thursday morning, Cambodia announced it was downgrading ties to "the lowest level", pulling out all but one of its diplomats and expelling their Thai equivalents from Phnom Penh. Recent weeks have seen a series of tit-for-tat swipes by both sides, with Thailand restricting border crossings and Cambodia halting certain imports. The Thai army said in a statement that one soldier lost his leg in the landmine blast, and others suffered ear injuries and chest pain. Cambodia's defence ministry on Wednesday night "categorically rejected the unfounded accusations" made by Thailand. The ministry said the border areas still contained "many landmines left over from past wars" which have not been fully cleared. The border row also kicked off a domestic political crisis in Thailand, where prime minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra has been suspended from office pending an ethics probe over her conduct. A diplomatic call between Paetongtarn and Hun Sen, Cambodia's former longtime ruler and father of Prime Minister Hun Manet, was leaked from the Cambodian side, sparking a judicial investigation. Last week, Hun Manet announced that Cambodia would start conscripting civilians next year, activating a long-dormant mandatory draft law.

Afghan beauty salons in struggle to survive after Taliban ban
Afghan beauty salons in struggle to survive after Taliban ban

France 24

time3 days ago

  • France 24

Afghan beauty salons in struggle to survive after Taliban ban

Donald Trump is simply unable to shake off the Jeffrey Epstein scandal. A part of his support base is furious over Trump's flip-flopping on Epstein's alleged "client list". In a bid to deflect attention, as The Washington Post notes, Trump created a debate about a football team's name, released hundreds of thousands of classified documents pertaining to the death of Martin Luther King Jr, surmised about how former USAID ambassador Samantha Powell made her money and then reposted a bizarre AI-generated video appearing to show former president Barack Obama being arrested by federal agents. According to one analyst, "nobody turns the page better than Donald Trump". However, this scandal has called into question his ability to do so because he's in a real fight with his own base and the mainstream media are more than happy to fan the flames of discord. Le Monde newspaper, meanwhile, has published a series focusing on the US tech titans who are cosying up to Trump. It's a long-format read which takes us behind the scenes of Trump's inauguration earlier this year: in particular, the notable presence of tech billionaires like Jeff Bezos and Mark Zuckerberg. Bezos' overt embracing of Trump contrasts with his previous support for Democrats. As for Zuckerberg, his management style was previously more casual and informal but has since transformed to more authoritarian – all in a bid to curry favour with Trump. Turning to Afghanistan, the International Criminal Court (ICC) wants to arrest Taliban leaders over gender persecution of Afghan women, in what the academic website The Conversation calls a world first. Earlier this month, the court in The Hague issued arrest warrants against Taliban leaders in Afghanistan, accusing them of being guilty of crimes against humanity of persecution on gender grounds. In other words, the court hopes to bring them to account for the draconian measures imposed on girls and women in Afghanistan, who have been forbidden from going to school after the age of 12 and banned from public spaces since the Taliban's takeover in 2021. The Washington Post specifically looks at the plight of beauty salons in Afghanistan. In the aftermath of the takeover, beauty salons were largely excluded from Taliban's draconian crackdown on society. Women flocked to the country's 12,000 beauty salons, which provided much-needed financial stability for the often female salon owners. Until 2023, that is. Officials then ordered women to shut down their salons, citing sharia law violations. At the time, the government justified its decision by saying that 95 percent of Afghans did not want women to go to work. More recently, they've tried to take a more moderate line, with women able to work in girls' schools or female hospitals and prisons. But as the Post notes, in a country scarred by four decades of war, women are often the only or primary breadwinners for many families — and many are now struggling make ends meet. Finally, the French regional newspaper Ouest-France talks about all the bizarre – and sometimes ugly – gifts that sports champions are given when they win! When you are a high-level athlete, winning might not be as hard as feigning happiness for an odd gift you receive from the host organisers. Tennis player Loïs Boisson recently won a competition in Hambourg sponsored by the shipping company MSC. In return, she received a miniature shipping container! Mathieu van der Poel, the winner of the Paris-Roubaix cycling race – known as the Hell of the North for its hard roads – received a piece of pavement as a reward. And cyclist Benoît Jarrier received a pig in 2015 – not for winning, but for being the first Breton to cross the finish line in a Brittany cycling race. He won that accolade four times!

Sri Lanka Catholics seek prosecution of sacked spy chief
Sri Lanka Catholics seek prosecution of sacked spy chief

France 24

time4 days ago

  • France 24

Sri Lanka Catholics seek prosecution of sacked spy chief

Church spokesman Cyril Gamini Fernando said they welcomed the dismissal days ago of Nilantha Jayawardena, who was head of the State Intelligence Service (SIS) when jihadist suicide bombers attacked three churches and three hotels. "This (sacking) is for the negligence part of it, but we want the authorities to investigate Jayawardena's role in the attack itself," Fernando told reporters in Colombo. "We want a criminal prosecution." He said evidence presented before several courts and commissions of inquiry indicated that the SIS, under Jayawardena, had attempted to cover up the actions of the jihadists in the lead-up to the April 21 attacks. "Six years on, we are still looking for answers. We want to know the truth about who was behind the attack," he said. Jayawardena, 52, was dismissed Saturday from the police department, where he was the second most senior officer in charge of administration and on track to become the next inspector-general. Court proceedings have revealed that both military and police intelligence units were closely linked to the home-grown jihadists, and some had even been on the payroll of the intelligence services. The current ruling party, led by Anura Kumara Dissanayake, had while in opposition accused Gotabaya Rajapaksa of orchestrating the attacks to win the 2019 presidential election. The once powerful Rajapaksa family has denied the allegations. The attacks occurred despite a warning from an intelligence agency in neighbouring India, which alerted Jayawardena 17 days before the devastating bombings. He was found guilty of ignoring a series of alerts. More than 500 people were also wounded in the bombings, Sri Lanka's worst jihadist attack on civilians. Jayawardena was removed from his position as SIS chief in December 2019 but was later promoted to deputy head of the police force, overseeing administration. However, he was placed on compulsory leave a year ago, pending the disciplinary inquiry, following repeated judicial orders to take action against him. © 2025 AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store