The Borneo Post

Thailand passes cyber-crime law

Critics say controvers­ial law strengthen­s junta’s ability to squeeze out criticism

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BANGKOK: Thailand’s rubberstam­p parliament yesterday passed a controvers­ial cybercrime law that critics say strengthen­s the junta’s ability to police the web and squeeze out criticism.

Free expression has been severely cramped since the generals seized power in 2014.

The junta has banned protests, muzzled the press, blocked scores of websites and used already stringent cyber and defamation laws to prosecute critics over everything from Facebook comments to investigat­ive reports on rights abuses.

Despite strong public criticism, the junta- appointed parliament

I can reassure that this law is important and necessary but will absolutely not violate personal rights.

on Friday voted to unanimousl­y pass an updated version of the Computer Crimes Act, with 167 yes votes and five abstention­s.

“I can reassure that this law is important and necessary but will absolutely not violate personal rights,” said lawmaker Chatchawal Suksomjit, a former top cop who drove through the bill.

Thailand’s new king Maha Vajiralong­korn will have to sign it off before it becomes law.

The government has said the law needed to be modernised.

But rights groups warn that the revised version is even more vaguely-worded than its predecesso­r, broadening the scope of the government’s surveillan­ce and censorship powers.

It allots up to five years in prison for entering “false informatio­n into a computer system that jeopardise­s national security, public safety, national economic stability or public infrastruc­ture, or causes panic”, according to a version of the law provided by Thai Netizen Network, an internet freedom advocacy group.

One of the most controvers­ial additions is the creation of a fiveperson committee that can seek court approval to remove online content considered a breach of “public morals”.

“The definition ( of this term) is not written in any law, it is just up to the committee,” said Arthit Suriyawong­kul of the Thai Netizen Network, which helped collect more than 300,000 signatures opposing the bill.

“It’s going to be very difficult for people to know what they can and cannot say. It could also be very inconsiste­nt from one government to another,” he added.

Another new clause empowers authoritie­s to request user and traffic data from internet service providers without a court warrant, raising privacy concerns.

Prosecutio­ns under both the Computer Crime Act and Thailand’s tough royal defamation law have skyrockete­d since the junta’s power grab, often netting social media users.

According to watchdog Fortify Rights, there have been at least 399 prosecutio­ns under the computer law in 2016 compared to 46 in 2013, the year before the junta grabbed power. — AFP

Chatchawal Suksomjit, lawmaker

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