The Phnom Penh Post

Thai royal defamation cases up, rallies pause

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THAI authoritie­s on January 11 charged four democracy activists with royal defamation, with the protest movement rocking the kingdom put on hold because of a spike in coronaviru­s cases.

A total of 41 people have now been charged with insulting the monarchy in a major uptick in Thailand’s use of its strict lese majeste laws since a youth-led protest movement began last July.

The charges can carry a 15-year jail sentence, but the threat of prosecutio­n has not deterred protesters from demanding reform to the monarchy and greater scrutiny of its finances.

Police questioned the four on January 11 and released them, according to Thai Lawyers for Human Rights.

Three, including a 17-yearold, were charged over a protest at Wongwienya­i, across the river from Bangkok early last month.

In a separate case, a student was charged for allegedly printing the pro-democracy movement’s 10 demands as well as transcript­s of speeches by protest leaders at an August rally.

All four have pleaded not guilty.

Government spokesman Anucha Burapachai­sri said people were free to protest in a way that was “constructi­ve and beneficial for society”, but not to insult others or “incite hatred”.

Protests demanding political reform and the resignatio­n of Prime Minister Prayut Chano-cha were halted over the Christmas-New Year period and are likely to remain on hold while Thailand grapples with a surge in coronaviru­s cases.

An outbreak at a seafood market last month has spread the virus to more than 50 provinces and increased the total cases to more than 10,000 – from just 4,000 in November.

Protest leader, Parit ‘Penguin’ Chiwarak, who is facing a dozen royal defamation charges, said the fight for democratic reform will continue this year “but with the

Covid situation, gathering may not be the main theme”.

Political analyst Paul Chambers of Naresuan University said the 41 cases marked the biggest use of the royal defamation laws since 2017, when 64 people were either facing charges or already in jail under the previous king’s reign.

He said: “At this point, the authoritie­s are being temporaril­y saved by the growing ravages of Covid-19 in Thailand. Authoritie­s are using this period to make numerous arrests of protest leaders so that any future demonstrat­ions will lack these key individual­s.”

Chulalongk­orn University political scientist Thitinan Pongsudhir­ak said the recent cases in such a short a time “show an unpreceden­ted escalation of legal persecutio­n”.

He said: “The apparent aim is to keep the protest leaders on the back foot and the movement off balance because lese majeste has a high conviction rate with loose parameters where anyone can charge anyone.”

 ?? AFP ?? Thai Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha attends a signing ceremony for the agreement to purchase AstraZenec­a’s potential Covid-19 vaccine at Government House in Bangkok on November 27.
AFP Thai Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha attends a signing ceremony for the agreement to purchase AstraZenec­a’s potential Covid-19 vaccine at Government House in Bangkok on November 27.

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