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Home arrow Politics arrow Thailand arrow More Lèse-Majesté Charges in Thailand
More Lèse-Majesté Charges in Thailand Print E-mail
Written by Our Correspondent   
Thursday, 01 April 2010
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Prachatai.com editor Chiranuch Premchaiporn in the holding cell at the Criminal Court on Wednesday afternoon
Independent website's editor's arrest may herald more crackdowns
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The jailing Wednesday in Bangkok of Chiranuch Premchaiporn, the webmaster of the popular independent Thai online news portal Prachatai, is another example of the stringent crackdown on any comment about the country's monarchy as the process to succeed the ailing 83-year-old King Bhumibol Adulyadej grows more intense.

Chiranuch was released after paying a Bt300,000 (US$9,269) bond and spending four hours in jail. The arrest was made under the Computer Crimes Act for not quickly removing public comments from her website that were deemed offensive to the monarchy. The website has become home to serious dissent and discussion of the situation in the country, which has been wracked by political turmoil, rallies, strikes and violence since former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra was ousted in a royalist coup in September of 2006.

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejajiva, in comments after a March 2009 speech at St John's College, Oxford in the UK, said he had "sorted out Chiranuch's case and it was a misunderstanding by the police." The raid on Prachatai came shortly after Abhisit, who had only been prime minister since December of 2008, had told an audience of media people that his government respected freedom of the press. 

Now the case has been taken up again, with or without Abhisit's authority, raising questions whether the military and the right wing are feeling their oats and about to engineer a tightened crackdown against the press and critics. Given that Abhisit had specifically referred to Chiranuch's case on several different occasions, saying it was "troubling," it also raises questions about his own authority within the government. Pressure has been growing on authorities to crack down on any dissent given the serious illness of the king, the world's longest-serving monarch and a linchpin for Thai society. 

"There is growing concern about the royal succession in Bangkok now that Thaksin and his republican supporters are willing to fight with the Bangkok elites in the open since his assets were seized," said a Bangkok source with access to the palace. "It is apparent because the king is very ill and the Red Shirts show no signs of giving up."

After a brief appearance for his birthday, the king quietly returned to the hospital, where he has been virtually nonstop since falling ill in September last year. "We in Thailand know he might be counting his days," the source said.

Vajiralongkorn, the crown prince, is regarded as erratic and virtually incapable of ruling. However, his sister, the crown princess Maha Chakri Sirindorn, the next possible heir and a favorite of many Thais, reportedly has told her servants she wants nothing to do with the throne, perhaps because she is worried over her personal safety, the source added, asking that his name not be used for fear of also being charged with lèse-majesté, or insulting the monarchy.

The queen has recently become more and more involved with politics. One theory making the rounds in Bangkok is that if the king dies, she would act as regent, bypassing Vajiralongkorn for the crown prince's fifth son, Prince Dipangkorn Rasmijoti, who is now less than five years old. The queen has come under considerable subterranean criticism for her involvement in politics, particularly with the royalist Yellow Shirts, however. 

Against that troubled background, attacks on the press or any other critics have increased. As many as 50,000 websites have been blocked in Thailand, including Asia Sentinel, which has been blocked intermittently for more than a month although some Thai readers apparently have been able to access it through different Internet providers.

Meanwhile the arrests continue. According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, "Former journalist and UDD activist Daranee Charnchoengsilpakul was convicted in August on three counts of Lèse-Majesté and sentenced to 18 years in prison for anti-royal comments made during a public protest in 2007. Suwicha Thakor, an oil rig engineer, was convicted and sentenced to 20 years in prison under the 2007 Computer Crimes Act for sending pictures over the Internet that pilloried King Bhumibol Adulyadej and heir apparent Crown Prince Vajiralongkorn. Suwicha's sentence was commuted to 10 years after he pleaded guilty." 

Also, a police complaint has been filed by a private citizen against the entire board of directors of the Foreign Correspondents Club of Thailand for selling DVD copies of a 2007 speech by a Thaksin supporter that touched on the monarchy. The police at this point have taken no action against the FCCT. The speaker, Jakropob Penkair, has since fled Thailand, as has Giles Ji Ungpakorn, a former sociology professor and critic of the monarchy.

Chiranuch, the operator of Prachatai, faces her first hearing in the Criminal Court in Bangkok on May 31. She was first arrested last March under the computer offense law, which was first used against an earlier blogger who was later given 20 years in jail. Six more people have been arrested since, although prosecutors have yet to file charges against any of them. 

Changes have been made to this story to eliminate factual errors: Eds.
Comments (5)Add Comment
0
not even an "Oxonian", could be this big a fool...
written by john francis lee, April 01, 2010
' Pressure has been growing on authorities to crack down on any dissent given the serious illness of the king, the world's longest-serving monarch and a linchpin for Thai society. '

Yes, "to crack down on any dissent"... this lese majeste business is a smokescreen,

Of course you are right to point out that anything Abhisit says is irrelevant. This is the Military's regime, not his. They tolerate whatever he might say as verbiage for export only.

I use to think that "poor" Abhisit was only a fool. Now it's become apparent that no one, not even an "Oxonian", could be this big a fool... he's an outright liar.
0
Up a notch, please
written by errin Purpose, April 02, 2010
Although the military seems to be the culprit, they are serving a more powerful and demanding master.
0
...
written by park, April 03, 2010
This country is now on a brink of a civil war. There is no way anyone one can turn back the clock. Only modernizing and accepting the change, this country will be able to survive. Suppressing the poor will make it worse. Thailand is now a "FAILED STATE''. Double standard is everywhere to be seen. The poor are treated differently. Those who wear red are a second class citizen while those who wear yellow and pink are upper class citizen. The country will not survive under this state. Apisit has no power in handling things, he can't even protect himself. He has only himself to be blamed. Graduating from Oxford didn't help this guy from learning the word "DEMOCRACY'' . When fellow Thais start killing each others, neighbours start killing the guy with a different view next door. Then everything will be too late.
0
...
written by Shan, April 03, 2010
The king is and keeps the country in limbo: He's not dead, yet. But he's half dead, unable to physically or psychically influence anything of the fatal impasse that has been created in his name. As contradictory as it may sound: he's been such a positive individual and stabilizing force for the past 50 years that the country forgot to get rid of the vast and rotten nobility in Thailand.

Abhisit is a good man. Many farmers and community leaders - or "grass-roots" people, as they are called in political lingo - agree with that. The fact that he was born and educated in the UK doesn't make him elitist per se (Almost all Asian revolutionaries - good or bad - were raised or informed through European education systems). The (unsaid) feeling amongst the red shirts is that he joined the wrong side. And since it's all black and white, he now is labeled an enemy of democracy. Fact is: he has VERY limited elbowroom. The dreadful political coalition partners, the military, the nobility (I can't be bothered to count royal tree clans right now)...

Yes, the Lèse-Majesté law is ridiculous and must be abolished asap. But this will only happen in the context of a total overhaul of the system.

But before any of this can happen with a bit of credibility the UDD/red shirts must - first of all - break away from crooks like Thaksin and then clean up their act and stop to threaten people and take a stand and not run away (Giles, etc.).

As long as UDD / red shirts associate with crooks and intimidation tactics they have no moral high ground and thus no legitimation to ask for a "better" system.
0
Lanna perspective
written by Lannalover, April 07, 2010
Two factors in the big picture
External interests of Dragon and eagle and lanna and issaan and many minorities have been ignored by urban elite or duped by Teowchao moneylenders

Factual education and criticism while banned does not mean the people cannot see the corruption.
Socialism was outlawed by US and yabba by Thaksin this with his brutal handling of a latent disunity threatne the the seeds of Thai Democracy declining since LeePakchun
While presentable and mild mannered Apisit will be cut oose like all military puupets.
Interesting that the Bahts have appreciated a third againsy sterling since Thaksin new ASIAN highways vaste malls and suburban devellllepoment everywhere,so maybe osturing of shirts whatever hue cannot damage this low wage open foreigner friendly society .

Progress dilaectical materialism and mercatile capitalism are deeply at odds with a supstitious hierarchical sexit Bhuddist polity and it sad how ignorant much of the criticism of Siamese ethics.

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