New Straits Times

Thai dissidents refuse to give up the fight

-

BANGKOK: Jailed seven years for publishing satire of a fictitious royal family, activist Somyot Prueksakas­emsuk is in awe yesterday as university students spearhead a growing movement demanding reforms to Thailand’s ultra-powerful monarchy.

Young activists have staged near-daily protests for the past two months calling for frank discussion­s of the unassailab­le royal family’s role, once a taboo topic because of Thailand's draconian royal defamation laws.

And they have inspired Somyot to join the rallies here, even if he is fearful of a possible crackdown.

“The struggle is not finished,” the veteran activist, 58, said.

“I’m really proud that our efforts in the past continue. The new generation is discoverin­g the reality — that there is no hope for them under this system.”

Among the students’ demands is the abolition of the so-called “112” law, which shields the royal family from defamation but has been broadly interprete­d to target any criticism.

It carries a maximum sentence of 15 years per charge.

They are also calling for the resignatio­n of premier Prayuth Chan o Cha, a former army chief who mastermind­e d the 2014 coup, and a rewrite to the military-scripted constituti­on they say stacked last year’s election in his favour.

“He made all the rules and called it democracy,” antijunta activist Pai, real name Jatupat Boonpattar­araksa, said.

Pai also fell afoul of the notorious royal defamation law.

Arrested in 2016 after sharing a BBC article about King Maha Vajiralong­korn on Facebook, he was jailed for more than two years before receiving a royal pardon last year.

“This generation of kids is coming out to say what we have not dared say before,” said the 29year-old.

Today, he helps fire up the crowds alongside his Gen-Z counterpar­ts, many of them inspired by Hong Kong’s leaderless pro-democracy protests.

Just six people were behind bars on lese majeste charges before the 2014 coup, according to legal aid groups.

Somyot was among them, ensnared by the law in 2011 after his nowdefunct Vo i c e o f Thaksin magazine published satirical articles about a fictional king.

Part of the “Red Shirt” movement, he supported former billionair­e premier Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted in a 2006 coup and lives in self-imposed exile.

Somyot said he was disappoint­ed to see the junta still in power when he was released in 2018.

“I came out to this society that still has no freedom.”

By the end of the junta’s fiveyear regime, the number of lese majeste conviction­s had surged to at least 169 although use of the law has slowed in recent years.

Prayuth had said this was due to the “mercy” of the king.

Using lese majeste was not good for the monarchy’s image, Somyot said, explaining it implied the institutio­n was “confrontin­g the people directly”.

But dozens of student protesters have been hit with a sedition charge instead, potentiall­y facing up to seven years in jail, and also accused of breaking coronaviru­s distancing rules by taking part in demonstrat­ions.

Some prominent activists have been charged multiple times for taking part in the protests.

The situation remained “dangerous”, said Prontip Mankhong, a former playwright who spent two years in prison for a work deemed defamatory by a court.

Her experience was captured in a memoir, All They Could Do to Us, which had a second print-run this year due to its popularity with protesters.

The young artiste, currently studying in Europe and following the movement online, admitted she was scared for the student leaders.

“I respect their choices. If you choose to fight against the monarchy in Thailand, you must be prepared for the worst-case scenario.”

In the past two years, at least nine pro-democracy activists who fled Thailand since the 2014 coup have disappeare­d, according to Human Rights Watch.

Arch-royalist groups have also sprung up in response to the student movement, and Prayut has warned that Thailand could be “engulfed in flames” if protesters push too far.

 ??  ?? Somyot Prueksakas­emsuk
Somyot Prueksakas­emsuk

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia