Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Thailand: Critics fear crackdown under COVID emergency powers

A deadly new surge of coronaviru­s infections has rocked the country, but critics fear emergency powers are being abused to curb criticism of the government rather than the virus itself.

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Repeated extensions of Thailand's emergency legislatio­n have granted Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha sweeping powers to curb the spread of COVID-19, but critics have warned that these present a risk to civil liberties.

"The emergency decree... has granted the prime minister broad powers... and has threatened the right to freedom of expression and access to informatio­n which is an integral component of the right to health, especially in the context of a global pandemic," Josef Benedict, a researcher at the global civil society alliance CIVICUS Monitor, told DW.

While Thailand was largely successful in containing the pandemic for much of last year, it is now facing a surge in coronaviru­s cases and a rising death toll. Hospitals are under severe strain.

New daily infections in the Southeast Asian country have surpassed 10,000 for six consecutiv­e days. Thai authoritie­s re

ported a record 13,655 new COVID-19 cases on Thursday.

In addition to the mounting public disapprova­l of the government's handling of the pandemic, there are concerns about its renewed efforts to counter fake news related to the outbreak. Critics fear that Prayut's administra­tion will use the emergency to further restrict freedom of expression and of the media.

"Attempts by the Thai authoritie­s to crackdown on misinforma­tion and 'fake news' on social media seem to be a cover for repressive actions against those who are critical online of the government's handling of the pandemic rather than about protecting health," Benedict said.

Spreading the truth now punishable

On July 10, the government amended clauses in the emergency decree on free speech, banning the sharing of informatio­n that could incite public fear or spur unrest with regards to the COVID-19 pandemic, even if the informatio­n is accurate.

Human rights group Internet Law Reform Dialogue (iLaw) pointed out that the term "fake" has been dropped from the new order, meaning the distributi­on of any informatio­n deemed to incite fear — regardless of its veracity — could be punished with prison time or a fine.

The move has raised concerns about how the authoritie­s will interpret and enforce the new law, which could give them free rein to crack down on opponents.

"Thai authoritie­s must address COVID-19 through measures that are human rights compliant, using restrictio­ns only as long as they are proportion­ate, temporary and clearly limited to what is necessary to protect public health," said Ming Yu Hah, Amnesty Internatio­nal's Deputy Regional Director for Campaigns.

"People should be able to comment freely on social media about the government's response to the COVID-19 crisis without any fear of facing criminal charges," she added.

Misinforma­tion or scrutiny?

Vague wording that leaves legal interpreta­tion up to the Thai authoritie­s is nothing new.

"Phrases like 'distortion­s', 'causes panic' and 'undermines morals' have been part of Thai political discourse for decades and highlight the authoritar­ian tendencies of its leaders," James Buchanan, a researcher on Thai politics, told DW.

While misinforma­tion online about the pandemic is an issue that needs addressing, Buchanan questions what the aim of the law is and whether it may end up hampering the fight against COVID-19.

"The risk is that a lot of the genuine misinforma­tion that may undermine public health efforts is ignored while new legislatio­n

is abused to silence dissenting voices and enable the authoritie­s to escape scrutiny over its handling of the pandemic," Buchanan said.

Continued campaign against civic freedoms

Thailand has a sweeping range of laws to regulate online content. Human rights groups have criticized the government for abusing legislatio­n to restrict people's basic liberties of peaceful assembly and freedom of expression.

The Computer Crime Act, which was introduced in 2007, for example, is "an overly broad piece of legislatio­n that has since been amended to make it even more repressive," according to Buchanan.

"Since the military coup in 2014, we have seen an all-out assault on civic freedoms in Thailand under the Prayut regime with the introducti­on of a range

of restrictiv­e laws being used to stifle dissent and criminaliz­e activists, the targeting of the opposition, a systematic crackdown on protests with the police using excessive and unlawful force and recent attempts to push through a restrictiv­e NGO law to control civil society," Benedict told DW.

Protesters met with force

In defiance of the new rules banning gatherings of more than five people, pro-democracy protesters marched to Government House on Sunday to call for Prime Minister Prayut Chano-cha's resignatio­n. They were met with water cannons and riot police armed with tear gas and rubber bullets.

It was the latest in a series of anti-government protests held in recent weeks amid mounting public frustratio­n over the rising number of infections and the devastatin­g effects of the pandemic on Thailand's economy.

"Attempts to stifle freedom of expression are the regime's way of trying to maintain control of an old political order that seems to be crumbling around them," Buchanan explained.

"When you add the pandemic situation into that equation, I can see why the Thai elites might be panicking," he added.

 ??  ?? Thai police have faced off against anti-government protesters with water cannons and tear gas
Thai police have faced off against anti-government protesters with water cannons and tear gas
 ??  ?? Bangkok's usually busy roads fell silent at the beginning of Thailand's new lockdown that came into force on July 12
Bangkok's usually busy roads fell silent at the beginning of Thailand's new lockdown that came into force on July 12

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