The Star Malaysia

All-mighty power to the spy agency in Thailand

The agency will be handed carte blanche powers to obtain informatio­n on matters that threaten national security. >19

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BANGKOK: Thailand’s spy agency is set to be handed carte blanche powers to obtain informatio­n believed to threaten the country’s security using “any methods”, according to a Bill.

The Bill, published by palace mouthpiece the Royal Gazette, comes less than a month after disputed elections which saw both the ruling junta and an opposition coalition claim the right to form a government.

The law, which was last discussed by Thailand’s rubberstam­p parliament in early February but has largely escaped public notice, is to be enforced from Thursday, the announceme­nt said.

It empowers the National Intelligen­ce Agency – which handles the country’s counter-intelligen­ce and security operations – to “order government offices and individual­s” to turn over any informatio­n affecting the country’s security.

This process is to be run under the approval of the country’s premier – currently junta leader Prayut Chan-O-Cha.

If the initial order to turn over informatio­n is ignored, the prime minister will be informed and the NIA “may use any methods, including electronic, telecommun­ications, or science equipments to gain the informatio­n or documents”.

The Bill, which consists of 17 articles, will replace the 1985 intelligen­ce law which is currently “not relevant with the security threat and technology that has changed”, said a note at the end of the Bill.

Since the junta came into power in 2014 after ousting then-premier Yingluck Shinawatra in a coup, a raft of laws have been passed that rights groups say restricts dissent.

The intelligen­ce Bill will join a recently passed cybersecur­ity law, which had triggered pushback from rights groups and companies worried about privacy breaches as it allows authoritie­s to seize computers or devices without a court warrant if there are “critical threats” to cybersecur­ity.

Junta leader Prayut is currently tipped to return to power as a civilian premier under his military-aligned Palang Pracharat party, which won the popular vote in last month’s election.

But the anti-junta coalition says it has the majority of seats in the lower house, and Thailand’s Election Commission has been dogged with criticism over bungled vote counts, inconsiste­nt tallies and more than 2.1 million invalidate­d ballots.

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