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Royal defamation may cost Thai lawyer longest jail term

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  • Royal defamation may cost Thai lawyer longest jail term

    Royal defamation may cost Thai lawyer longest jail term
    Wed May 3, 2017


    Prawet Prapanukul (shown), a prominent human rights lawyer and critic of the Thai monarchy, has been missing since security forces raided his Bangkok home on April 29, 2017.
    (Photo by Private)

    A Thai human rights lawyer could be sentenced to a maximum 150 years in prison after he was charged with a record ten counts of royal defamation, a rights group said Wednesday.

    Prawet Prapanukul, a well-known critic of the law under which he is now being prosecuted, was detained by soldiers and police at his Bangkok home on Saturday.

    Activists called for the release of the 57-year-old as authorities refused to disclose his whereabouts or the charges he faced.

    But on Wednesday afternoon he appeared in court charged with ten counts of royal defamation and a separate charge of sedition.

    "He was charged with ten counts of 112 and for 116," Anon Numpa, from Thai Lawyers from Human Rights, told AFP.

    Section 112 of the criminal code outlaws any criticism of the king, queen, heir or regent. Each count carries up to fifteen years in jail and it has been used with particular ferocity in recent years.

    Section 116 outlaws sedition, a law that has also become increasingly wielded since an ultra-royalist military junta seized power in 2014.

    Ten royal defamation charges is the most anyone has ever faced in Thailand since the law become increasingly used.

    The UN's rights body, which began monitoring cases in 2006, says the previous record was six charges for six separate Facebook posts written by a woman in 2015.

    Rights groups expressed shock at the latest charge.

    "Imprisonment is never a proportionate penalty for the exercise of free expression, let alone the unthinkable possibility of 150 years," Kingsley Abbott, from the International Commission of Jurists which has monitored lese majeste trials, told AFP.

    He added the UN had just last month criticized use of the law.

    It is not known what Prawet said or wrote. However media inside Thailand must heavily self-censor when reporting on the monarchy, including repeating any content deemed defamatory.

    Trials are often held behind closed doors and acquittals are rare.

    Prosecutions have skyrocketed since the junta's takeover. Critics say the legislation has been used to stifle political opponents rather than protect the monarchy.

    Last October Thailand's widely revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej passed away after seven decades on the throne. His crown has passed to his son Maha Vajiralongkorn, who has yet to attain his father's widespread popularity.

    (Source: AFP)
    presstv.com
    http://thailandchatter.com/showthrea...ll=1#post45112

  • #2
    Prawet Prapanukul


    Case background
    Difficulty in reaching the publicLife behind bars
    http://thailandchatter.com/showthrea...ll=1#post45112

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