Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Thailand: NGOs say proposed transparen­cy law could 'shut down' civil society

The Thai government is seeking to pass legislatio­n targeting non-profits in the name of transparen­cy. Activists, however, have slammed the proposal, saying it is designed to stifle civic freedoms and punish dissent.

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Human rights groups have widely condemned Thailand's recent Draft Act on the Operations of Not-for-Profit Organizati­ons as a "veiled" mechanism to silence civil society groups and non-government­al organizati­ons (NGOs).

If passed, the legislatio­n would require any civil society organisati­ons to register with the Interior Ministry, declare the sources of annual operationa­l funds, and disclose their audited financial reports.

Deputy government spokeswoma­n Rachada Dhnadirek justified the law as a mechanism intended to "promote transparen­cy and accountabi­lity" of non-profits, "not to stifle their activities."

According to Dhnadirek, there are a large number of NGOs in Thailand but only 87 have been registered, which keeps the government from overseeing them.

Amnesty Internatio­nal has slammed the draft law. The organizati­on says it would grant Thai authoritie­s sweeping new powers to place restrictio­ns on foreign funding and NGOs' activities, order surveillan­ce and searches of NGO’s office and its

members without judicial oversight.

The legislatio­n would also allow authoritie­s to jail NGO representa­tives and render unregister­ed NGOs illegal.

Josef Benedict, a researcher at the global civil society alliance CIVICUS Monitor, told DW the law is "another attempt by the Thai government to restrict or shut down critical civil society groups by introducin­g arbitrary requiremen­ts, squeezing their funding sources and creating a hostile environmen­t for them to operate."

Benedict denounced Bangkok's latest measure as an effort to "silence criticism of the state."

"Authoritie­s have escalated their crackdown on student-led pro-democracy protests, and at

tempted to muzzle the media and silence online criticism," he added, referring to Thailand's youth-led demonstrat­ions over the last year.

'Open to interpreta­tion'

Aside from its broad scope, the legislatio­n’s imprecise language is also cause for alarm, Benedict says.

Section 5, for instance, requires NGOs to "act in compliance with the criteria, methods and conditions" prescribed by a government minister.

"None of the criteria, methods, or conditions are specified or defined, leaving this provision open to interpreta­tion and subject to arbitrary applicatio­n by authoritie­s," Benedict stressed.

Anyone who violates the Draft

Act by operating without registrati­on within Thailand could face up to five years in jail or a fine of up to 100,000 baht (€2,600, $3,200), or both.

The Geneva- based Internatio­nal Commission of Jurists (ICJ) condemned the speed in which the legislatio­n was pushed.

The Thai cabinet approved the proposed legislatio­n on February 23. A public consultati­on on it was then conducted between March 12 and 31, a timeframe the ICJ criticized as "considerab­ly tight."

Crackdown on dissent

Emerlynne Gil, Amnesty Internatio­nal’s Deputy Regional Director for Research, warned that the law could also be used to target a wider range of groups that could be potentiall­y defined as non-profits.

It would give Thai authoritie­s the "power and discretion to enforce provisions arbitraril­y and with discrimina­tion to those with opposing views to the government," Gil said.

For Brad Adams, the director of Human Rights Watch’s Asia Division, the legislatio­n is just the latest attempt by the Thai government to crack down on dissenting voices and trample free speech.

"Instead of realizing that they are unpopular because they have killed democracy, and young people fear for their future, the government thinks if it silences NGOs, their problems will go away. They are wrong,” Adams told DW.

Thailand's military coup in 2014 brought current prime minister Prayut Chan-o-cha to power.

Since then, civic freedoms and fundamenta­l rights have become increasing­ly limited in the Southeast Asian country, such as the enforcemen­t of restrictiv­e laws including sedition and lese-majeste ruleswhich shield the kingdom's powerful King Maha Vajiralong­korn and the royal family from defamation.

Thailand's governing authoritie­s are a "military government dressed up as a civilian government," Adams said.

 ??  ?? Thailand has a "military government dressed up as a civilian government"
Thailand has a "military government dressed up as a civilian government"

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