Thai govt files royal insult complaint after criticism of its vaccine
strategy
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[January 20, 2021]
By Patpicha Tanakasempipat
BANGKOK (Reuters) - Thailand's government
on Wednesday filed a criminal complaint of defaming the monarchy against
a banned opposition politician after he criticised the country's
COVID-19 vaccine strategy.
The move could mark the highest-profile lese majeste case since a wave
of anti-government protests emerged last year and extended to criticism
of King Maha Vajiralongkorn over accusations of meddling in politics and
taking too much power.
The complaint against Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit under Article 112 of
the criminal code came two days after he said the government was too
reliant on a company owned by the Crown Property Bureau, which is under
the king's personal control, to produce vaccines for Thais.
Lese majeste in Thailand punishes defaming or insulting the king by up
to 15 years in prison.
Government officials who filed the complaint told reporters Thanathorn
had defamed the monarchy by linking it to the vaccine strategy.
"Thanathorn distorted facts and caused misunderstanding among people,"
Suporn Atthawong, a minister in the prime minister's office, told
reporters.
"He violated the monarchy, which upset Thai people who love and protect
the monarchy."
The complaint, which also included a cyber crime accusation of uploading
false information, came after Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, who took
power in a 2014 military coup, vowed on Tuesday to prosecute "distorted"
information about the vaccine strategy.
"The more you discredit or harass me with legal cases, the clearer my
suspicions become," Thanathorn, who was banned from politics for 10
years by a court last year, said in a Facebook post following the
government's complaint.
The Progressive Movement, headed by Thanathorn, said earlier there was
no insult in his comments at the group's event titled "Royal Vaccine:
Who Benefits and Who Doesn't?", broadcast on Facebook Live on Monday.
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Future Forward Party leader Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit gives a
speech at the party's headquarters in Bangkok, Thailand February 21,
2020. REUTERS/Soe Zeya Tun/File Photo
"It's obvious that 112 is being used again as a political tool,"
Pannika Wanich, Thanathorn's colleague and one of the group's
leaders, told Reuters, referring to the law.
Charles Santiago, a Malaysian lawmaker who chairs the Association of
Southeast Asian Nations' Parliamentarians for Human Rights, called
the move "yet another illustration of the cynical weaponisation of
the lese majeste law to stifle any form of criticism".
Government spokeswoman Ratchada Dhanadirek said prosecutions were
not politically motivated.
"The government doesn't need to use the law as a political tool to
deal with anyone," she told Reuters. "We're focused on urgent
economic problems and long-term national recovery."
The Progressive Movement was formed after a court last year ruled to
dissolve Thanathorn's Future Forward Party, which came in third in
2019 elections held five years after Prayuth's coup.
Opposition parties accused Prayuth's junta of designing the
elections to ensure he remained in power. Prayuth's pro-military
party has said the elections were free and fair.
(Additional reporting by Panarat Thepgumpanat; Editing by Ed Davies,
Clarence Fernandez and Nick Macfie)
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