The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Thai mothers fight for activist children charged with insulting king

- PATPICHA TANAKASEMP­IPAT

BANGKOK - Sureerat Chiwarak sat with calm resolve in front of a Bangkok court as her head was shaved in a protest to support her activist son, jailed for weeks without bail on criminal charges of insulting Thailand’s powerful king.

It was a moment the 51-year-old business consultant had never foreseen, but she felt desperate to do something after her son, student protest leader Parit “Penguin” Chiwarak, 22, was taken to hospital after nearly eight weeks of hunger strike.

“My son is dying and I can’t do anything about it. It’s a terrible feeling. The people in power are letting my son die,” Sureerat told Reuters in an interview.

“The head shaving was just a start. It’s the least I could do when I’m prepared to risk my life for his.”

As authoritie­s locked up young protest leaders and largely brought their campaign to a halt, Sureerat came to forge an unlikely alliance with other mothers who are seeking freedom for their children and had never been particular­ly political before.

A core group of five mothers, from a business owner to a rice farmer, formed their bond as they met on trips to court and prison to see their children.

The focus of their campaign is the release of their children, not the causes the young activists have taken up. But for some, their efforts have become intertwine­d with some of the issues that got the youngsters into trouble.

The mothers have recently staged several quiet protests, standing together for one hour and 12 minutes - a reference to Article 112 in the criminal code on insulting the monarchy - next to cardboard cutouts of their children and showing the three-finger salute of defiance to demand that they be granted bail.

Six young protest leaders, including Parit, remain in jail. The court has repeatedly denied them bail, citing the severity of the charges against them, which include insulting the king.

The protesters broke longstandi­ng taboos last year by calling for reform of the monarchy - an unpreceden­ted demand in a country where the king is constituti­onally “enthroned in a position of revered worship” and insulting him is punishable by up to 15 years in prison.

The protesters also demanded the departure of former junta leader Prayuth Chan-ocha as prime minister and a new constituti­on.

While the calls aimed at reducing the powers of the monarchy have struck a chord with young activists, many Thais are devoted to the king and resent the protests.

The Royal Palace has declined to comment directly on the issue but late last year, the king, in brief remarks on the protesters, said: “we love them all the same” and described Thailand as a land of compromise.

 ?? REUTERS ?? The mothers of anti-government protest leaders facing lese majeste charges, Malai Nampha, Sureerat Chiwarak, Yupin Maneewong and Suriya Sithijiraw­attanakul attend a demonstrat­ion demanding the release of their sons outside Remand prison, in Bangkok, Thailand.
REUTERS The mothers of anti-government protest leaders facing lese majeste charges, Malai Nampha, Sureerat Chiwarak, Yupin Maneewong and Suriya Sithijiraw­attanakul attend a demonstrat­ion demanding the release of their sons outside Remand prison, in Bangkok, Thailand.

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