Thai monk held over anti-Islam videos
BANGKOK: Thai authorities have detained a Buddhist monk who posted videos harshly denouncing Islam online.
Apichart Punnajanto was detained on Tuesday by officers from the Crime Suppression Division, said police Col Dusit Promsin in the southern province of Songkhla.
Dusit said the monk was taken into custody because of videos he had posted online, though he did not describe the content.
Thai media published images of temple records indicating that Apichart was defrocked on Wednesday night at a temple in Bangkok.
Sunai Phasuk, a senior researcher on Thailand for Human Rights Watch, criticised the detention in a Twitter post.
He said it was more proof that under the ruling military junta, “everyone risks becoming a victim of freewheeling uses of power, secret detainments and unlawful prosecutions”.
Thailand has been ruled by the military since a 2014 coup toppled a democratically elected government, and the junta has made clear that it does not tolerate dissent.
Apichart has spoken out on many issues, but is best known for posting a suggestion that a mosque be burned down anytime a monk is killed by Muslim separatist insurgents in the country’s deep south, where more than 6,500 people have been killed since an insurgency flared in 2004.
The violence occurs mostly in Thailand’s three southernmost provinces, the only ones with Muslim majorities in the Buddhistdominated nation, but has on occasion spilled over into neighbouring Songkhla.
Apichart also recently renewed a feud with a government religious official, saying in a video that he filed a defamation suit against him and sarcastically urging people in the south, where the official was recently transferred, to give him a “warm welcome”.
The military government has the power to detain people without due process if they are considered a threat to public order or national security.
They are often held briefly for “attitude adjustment” before being freed without formal charges. — AP