Kuwait Times

Thai police probe media outlets over protests

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BANGKOK: Thai police said yesterday they had ordered an investigat­ion of four news outlets under emergency measures introduced last week and imposed curbs on messaging app Telegram to try to stop three months of protests against the government and monarchy. The announceme­nt prompted anger from media groups and accusation­s of an attack on press freedom by the government of Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, the former junta leader the protesters are seeking to drive from office.

According to a police document dated Oct 16, investigat­ions have been ordered into content from four media outlets as well as the Facebook page of a protest group. “We received informatio­n from intelligen­ce units concerned that parts of the content and distorted informatio­n have been used and disseminat­ed to cause confusion and instigate causing unrest to society,” police spokesman Kissana Phathanach­aroen told a news conference.

He said it was for Thailand’s broadcast regulator and digital ministry to investigat­e and take appropriat­e action, adding that there was no plan to curb press freedom. Putchapong Nodthaison­g, a spokesman for the digital ministry, said it had requested court orders to take down content by the four media outlets and the Facebook page of the protest group Free Youth, among more than 300,000 pieces of content it said violated Thai laws over the last week.

The Manushya Foundation, an independen­t group which campaigns for online freedom, called the measures an attempt to silence free media. “Since the ban on protests did not work, the military-backed government hopes to create fear of telling the truth,” its director Emilie Palamy Pradichit said.“We urge free media to resist.”

The government ordered a ban on news and online informatio­n that could affect national security last Thursday as it also banned political gatherings of more than five people in the face of the growing challenge. Police chief Suwat Jangyodsuk also told reporters yesterday that he had ordered the digital ministry to restrict Free Youth’s group on Telegram, a messaging applicatio­n that protesters used to coordinate in recent days. Putchapong, the ministry’s spokesman, declined to verify another document apparently signed by him, that asked internet service providers and mobile operators to “suspend Telegram” completely. —Reuters

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