New Straits Times

THANATHORN FACES SEDITION PROBE

Future Forward Party chief and rising star may face up to 9 years’ jail

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THAI police summoned a prominent anti-junta politician yesterday to answer a sedition complaint, a police document showed, a charge rising star Thanathorn Juangroong­ruangkit called politicall­y motivated after

a disputed election.

The sedition complaint — the second criminal case opened against Thanathorn since he formed the Future Forward Party last year — dates back to 2015 and was filed by the army, a police official said.

The progressiv­e, youth-oriented Future Forward Party made a surprising­ly strong showing in the March 24 election, coming in third with 6.2 million votes.

It was still unclear which party could form the government after the election, the first since a 2014 army coup. Final results may not be clear for weeks.

Future Forward has joined an opposition “democratic front” alliance that will try to form a government and block junta chief Prayuth Chan O Cha from staying in power.

Thanathorn, 40, is accused of breaking article 116 of the Thai criminal code, the equivalent of sedition, and article 189, for assisting others who committed a serious crime, the police summons showed.

He could face up to nine years in prison if found guilty.

Thanathorn will have to report to the Pathumwan police station here on Saturday.

“I don’t know what the charges are but it is obviously politicall­y motivated,” Thanathorn said.

The complaint against Thanathorn was filed by the army in 2015 over his involvemen­t in helping anti-junta protesters that year, a police officer said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to the media.

“The emergence of Thanathorn... isn’t a threat to the nation. It is a threat to the army that is hostile towards democracy and the people,” Thanathorn said.

The hashtag “#SaveThanat­horn” was a top Thai trend on Twitter yesterday, resurfacin­g from February when he met prosecutor­s about a cybercrime charge over a speech he made on Facebook criticisin­g the junta in July.

Prosecutor­s will decide on April 26 whether to put him on trial for the cybercrime charge.

The Thai military government dismissed the idea that the police action yesterday was politicall­y motivated, saying that the summons related to a national security matter.

“There will be an investigat­ion,” Thai deputy prime minister Prawit Wongsuwan said.

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