The Phnom Penh Post

Journo faces Thai jail over protective gear

- Jerome Taylor

A BRITISH journalist faces up to five years in a Thai jail after he was arrested for carrying a gas mask and plates for a bulletproo­f vest through Bangkok’s main airport on his way to cover fighting in the Iraqi city of Mosul, police confirmed yesterday.

Tony Cheng, who works for Chinese state broadcaste­r CCTV, was detained at Bangkok’s Suvarnabhu­mi airport on Monday night under a law that has been criticised by media groups.

Gas masks and ballistic vests are frequently used by reporters around the world but are classified as “war weapons” in Thailand and require a licence, something journalist­s have been unable to obtain. Violating the 1987 law is punishable by up to five years in jail.

“A British national was arrested and charged with illegal possession of war weapons last night at the airport,” Suvarnabhu­mi airport policeman Somchart Maneerat said yesterday.

Cheng, who is married to a Thai national, and German colleague Florian Witulski were on their way to report from Mosul where troops are battling Islamic State. The pair previously reported from Mosul in March.

Witulski was briefly detained alongside Cheng but was later released and has not been charged. Suvarnabhu­mi police said Cheng was released yesterday afternoon after his wife paid a 100,000 baht ($3,000) bail and he agreed to forfeit his passport.

In a Facebook post from an airport detention cell Cheng said the plates and gas mask were“for use in Mosul where ISIS are well documented to be using gas.”

Media groups have criticised the Thai law and say journalist­s should not be punished for carrying protective gear in and out of dangerous zones.

The Foreign Correspond­ents Club of Thailand said reporters based in the country who travel to dangerous assignment­s are “presented with an invidious choice: breakThai law or increase the risk to life and limb”.

Attempts over the years to amend the legislatio­n have fallen on deaf ears, despite Thailand’s own history of deadly street protests and a festering Muslim insurgency in the far south. The protection equipment law was rarely enforced until the military seized power three years ago.

“The issue has occurred quite a few times already, I am certain there will be review on this matter,” junta spokesman Major General Werachon Sukhonhapa­tipak said.

He added that journalist­s should inform authoritie­s if they plan to travel with such equipment.Yet media groups have said that would not protect reporters from the risk of prosecutio­n.

Bangkok has long been a regional hub for internatio­nal reporters but since the coup the military have clamped down on dissent and made media visas harder to obtain.

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