Lese Majeste Again and Again

Thai general hints at coup as tensions mount
By SUTIN WANNABOVORN – 6 hours ago
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) — Thailand's military commander has indicated that a coup is possible as tensions mount over a government minister accused of insulting the king.
The military has strong loyalties to the palace and has in the past also used alleged attacks against the monarchy as a pretext to seize power in some of Thailand's perennial coups.
Supreme Military Commander Gen. Boonsang Niempradit told reporters Thursday that "no soldier wants to stage a coup to topple the government but I cannot guarantee" that there will not be one.
The army and opposition parties have escalated their attacks on Jakrapob Penkair, a minister attached to the prime minister's office accused of insulting King Bhumibol Adulyadej.


Thai police say they will charge Cabinet minister with insulting monarchy, send case to court
2008-05-29 12:39:48 -
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - Thai police will recommend that a Cabinet minister accused of insulting the monarch be prosecuted in court.Police issued an announcement Thursday saying that an arrest warrant would be issued next week for Jakrapob Penkair, a minister attached to the prime minister's office.A police officer, acting in a private capacity, in March filed a complaint against Jakrapob, alleging that he had committed lese majeste, the crime of insulting the monarchy.His complaint was based on remarks Jakrapob allegedly made in August 2007 when Jakrapob was part of a group opposed to the military-installed government then in power.Jakrapob denies the allegation and says he is the target of a conspiracy.


Thailand land of lese majeste , freedom of speech is
in our dream only, in real life, its hard to find the true because this law
became weapon to destroy the opposite, It's fool or someone have wanted to use it to discredit to monarchy. Jakrapob who is mob leader to against Thai Coup, many rural people love him so much, if the palace will get rid off him, its no good for do that.

Dubai World may invest in Thailand's real estate and transport systems

Dubai World, an investment company owned by the emirate's government, may invest in Thailand's infrastructure and real estate to tap growth in the Southeast Asian nation, said Chairman Sultan Ahmed Bin Sulayem.

Bloomberg News Published: May 22, 2008

The investment group is conducting a "feasibility study" for the construction of a land bridge that will link the nation's southern provinces with the north, Bin Sulayem said today in Bangkok at a seminar hosted by former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra. The study, expected to be completed in four to eight weeks, will be submitted to the government, he said.

"We are very interested in the market in Thailand," Bin Sulayem said. "We are watching the growth and how the leadership is committed to developing the infrastructure. The land bridge will create jobs in three provinces in the south and create stability."

Comment : Thaksin run on his role again, his movement were decoded by his opposite that he 's still in politics, they have been afraid his influence really, its bring the mob assembly again.


Damn Thai media

The news about Jakrapob's issue, Thai media particular Nation , Bangkok post have tried to instigate Thaksin to conflict with Jakrapob.

For Jakrapob's issue who was accused by Democrats ,Pads, General that lese majeste.
Thaksin: Jakrapob must explain speech or resign

(BangkokPost.com) - Ex-premier Thaksin Shinawatra urged Prime Minister's Office Minister Jakrapob Penkair to retreat if he cannot reconcile the lese majeste accusation against him.

Mr Thaksin said Mr Jakrapob has to explain on the issue to public because this is a very sensitive matter.

"If he cannot make it clear, then it'd be better for him to retreat," Mr Thaksin said, adding that the royal institution should be given more importance than political matters.

The embattled minister also faces pressure from the People Power party to resign to show responsibility for a controversial speech given at the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Thailand in August last year and for a second speech in Thai during a visit to the United States..

The speech was considered by many as an attempt to challenge the royal institution.

But look at Nation media.


Thaksin urges Jakrapob to quit

Thaksin urges Jakrapob to quit

Former prime minister Thaksin Shinwatra on Wednesday urged his ally PM's Office Minister Jakrapob Penkair to reflect on his controversial remarks and chart his future accordingly.

"I think if Jakrapob can not explain himself to society, then it might be better for all concerned for him to retreat," he said, sending a strong signal for Jakrapob's departure from the government.

Thaksin said Jakrapob was obliged to dispel all lingering doubts about his stand on the monarchy, a most sensitive issue to every Thai citizen.


Fuck Thailand Media
What's True ?

The price of speech in Thailand

By Frank G. Anderson

Nakhonratchasima, Thailand — Thailand’s social, academic and political leadership seems to agree that the country has political woes, but in fact political woes are not the problem, only a symptom. The cause is a corrupt society.

There is also a corresponding lack of public responsibility on the part of the individual Thai, making positive reform more challenging and difficult. Finally, the nail in the coffin is a strict adherence to the belief that Thais must remain monolithic, “non-divisive,” committed to the monarchy and forever permitting elected politicians to do what they seem to do best -- personally benefit from corruption.

It’s not a pretty picture by any means. Incidental foreign visitors to the Land of Smiles and even, perhaps, the majority of expatriates within the kingdom, may not express blanket agreement with such a negative assessment. But what is the reason for their reluctance?

It is very possible that in adapting to their new home by adopting the cultural mores, foreigners have learned to submit to the collective will of the apathetic public and adopt a distorted version of the philosophy of the Noble Truths in the unique way that most Thais have adapted as they are brought up in their own society. In short, these foreigners may have “gone native” and thus can no longer differentiate what they once knew as the difference between right and wrong.

It sounds condescending, of course. But for those in Thailand who have long been privy to hundreds of private conversations, public heated discussions, leaked intelligence and unspoken yet accepted social practices -- generally through language proficiency -- for those who have learned to “think like a Thai” and forget general cultural references, the ability to use peripheral vision in thought, speech and action is diminished.

An example one often experiences among professional Thai translators is their reluctance to translate material from English to Thai or Thai to English that places Thailand, Thai culture or Thai society in a harshly critical light. One foreign Thai-fluent writer, for example, was contacted by a Thai living in San Francisco over a year ago to help translate sensitive language into English for a book about Thai culture and the monarchy. Some of the material hinted at criticism of the monarchy, or more accurately, highlighted situations that Thais steer away from because they somehow involve the monarchy or have been shown in the past to be deemed to be on sensitive ground. The Thai that sent the material to the foreigner in Thailand to translate told the foreigner that no Thai in the San Francisco area was willing to do the job.

Compare this to several instances here in Thailand where a foreigner needed to have translations of English language editorials into Thai. Most of these editorials did not involve the monarchy, but were critical accounts of Thai society and/or social practices he felt were out of touch with the values of Buddhism and democracy. When Thai translators were asked to convert these essays into Thai, they quickly refused.

In one case, the translator falsely let the foreigner believe he would do the work but a week later, when it should have been ready, the translator said he could no longer accept that or any other translation work.

The reluctance to even speak about material critical of Thai society, not just originate it, also occurs on the foreigner side. While working on a book about Thailand, another foreigner asked a long-time colleague from England to write a foreword on the author’s behalf. Having written at least two books himself about Thailand, the colleague emailed back quickly that he felt he was the wrong person to do the job. The overtone, however, was that the material in the book was critical of Thailand and that he would rather not become involved with it.

Needless to say, his own books were polite tourism surveys and lent nothing to important commentary on Thai society.

In an online interview, “The King Never Smiles” author Paul Handley commented, when the interviewer asked him why he had written such a book that was seen by many -- especially the Thai government -- to be critical of the Thai monarchy, Handley replied, “The question to ask is why such a book was not written before.”

Handley hit the nail on the head in a sense. Given ingrained and inculcated reluctance by the individual Thai to criticize anything -- although this is often not the actual situation -- important books that really detail Thai social character and Thai society in depth, up to and including the monarchy, are automatically discouraged. Somehow, it’s just not kosher. So Thais comply and foreigners who decide they need to keep a low profile go along with the flow. Important reportage, in-depth coverage of personalities and events, especially of social upheaval and a meaningful prognosis for Thailand’s future, are all rendered meaningless because they are never written.

Any serious foreigner writing about Thai social developments -- whether they are political, reflect on the monarchy or the country’s wayward practices of Buddhism -- are usually nipped in the bud before they start. There are too many conflicting vested interests afloat to generate truly serious commentary about the Land of Smiles. After all, if you keep your mouth shut, go into business with a local Thai who has had the government “lock the specs” on a product with a guaranteed market that only you are allowed to import into Thailand, and you bought a nice condo on the beach and have a really beautiful Thai wife or girlfriend, are making lots of money, and have friends and relative immunity from the police, then why rock the boat?

Author Paul Findley went ahead anyhow and rocked the boat. He does not expect to be welcomed back into Thailand anytime in the near future. But his book, “The King Never Smiles,” tells an important story and not only about certain aspects of the country’s revered monarchy. It is about Thai society in a more general way, a meaningful way. But in the land of illusion, this kind of revelation is viewed by the elite as divisive and unwanted, and they will always fight to preserve the status quo.

Yet, even as this column is being written, the People’s Alliance for Democracy will gather at Bangkok’s Victory Monument this Sunday, May 25, to protest government mandated changes to last year’s Constitution. Also, on Monday the Thai government spokesman and minister assigned to the Prime Minister’s Office, Jakrapob Phenkair, is scheduled to hold a press conference where he will try to explain his own acts of lese majeste while in Los Angeles on Nov. 10, 2007, as well as at a Foreign Correspondents Club of Thailand seminar. Despite the illusions of social unity and joint purpose, despite the cultural pressures that impose silence on those who would speak, there are still those who will speak, Thai or foreigner.

--

(Frank G. Anderson is the Thailand representative of American Citizens Abroad. He was a U.S. Peace Corps volunteer to Thailand from 1965-67, working in community development. A freelance writer and founder of northeast Thailand's first local English language newspaper, the Korat Post -- www.thekoratpost.com -- he has spent over eight years in Thailand "embedded" with the local media. He has an MBA in information management and an associate degree in construction technology. ©Copyright Frank G. Anderson.)

IMPEACHMENT Pressure mounts on Jakrapob

From Bangkok Post
Conflicting parties should avoid making references to the monarchy as it could be socially divisive, says Privy Councillor and former prime minister Surayud Chulanont. His remarks come as the Democrat party tries to have PM's Office Minister Jakrapob Penkair impeached for a speech allegedly expressing doubts about the monarchy.

Mr Jakrapob delivered his speech in English at the Foreign Correspondents Club of Thailand (FCCT) on Aug 29 last year while Gen Surayud was prime minister of the coup-installed government.

Gen Surayud said he has not met ousted prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra since the coup. But he said he and Mr Thaksin were like brothers at pre-cadet military school, although they held different political ideologies.

Meanwhile, the Democrat party will submit a petition to the Senate seeking Mr Jakrapob's impeachment on Wednesday.

Democrat party spokesman Ong-art Khampaiboon said the party has gathered evidence about the minister's speech and believed he should be impeached for his remarks.

The Democrat party earlier handed a letter to Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej, asking him to look into Mr Jakrapob's attitude towards the monarchy.

Mr Ong-art said that after the speech at the FCCT, Mr Jakrapob went to Los Angeles where he spoke in Thai to an audience on Nov 10. Mr Jakrapob's intentions behind the speeches were questionable, he said.

Mr Jakrapob's comments reflected a hostile attitude towards the constitutional monarchy, said Mr Ong-art.

His party wrote to the prime minister about Mr Jakrapob's conduct because it wanted Mr Samak to pay attention to the attitude and ideology of his ministers.

Campaign for Popular Democracy secretary-general Suriyasai Katasila called on Mr Jakrapob to show responsibility for his speech.

Mr Samak should remove the minister from cabinet and set up an inquiry into his comments, he said.

Mr Samak had distanced himself from the matter and told the Democrat party to file a complaint with police instead.
  • In my comment : Oh my god, Surayud is a good boy of Gen.Prem chief of privy council, its one of silly fake action in Thai political scene, everyone have known that Democrat Party was backed up by Gen.Prem to those movement include Chuan's movement. Please! leave the politician to do their duty alone.

A Thai Stands Up for Sitting Down

Our Correspondent
24 April 2008

An anti-coup activist faces insult charges for refusing to stand for the king’s anthem before a movie

Before every movie screening in Thailand, patrons are requested to stand up and pay respect to Thai King Bhumibol Adulyadej. A short film, played with the Royal Anthem as a sound track, shows fawning images of humble subjects or video clips of the king working tirelessly to help his people. Many Thais bow toward the screen after it ends to show respect.

Thailand imported the ritual from Britain, which in the 1910s regularly showed silent clips of King George V to the tune of “God Save the King" being played in theaters to whip up nationalist sentiment during World War I. The Brits scrapped the practice in the 1960s, but Thais started playing the Royal Anthem before movies in the 1970s and continue to do so today.

The social pressure to stand up is immense. So Chotisak Onsoong, a 27-year-old political activist who opposes the 2006 royalist coup, knew he would get dirty looks and comments when he remained seated in protest, as he normally does when attending a film.

But even he was surprised last September when fellow moviegoer Nawamin Witthayakul, 40, aggressively told him to stand up for the song at a movie theater in Bangkok's ritzy Central World shopping mall. According to Chotisak, Navawamin started yelling in the theater, saying, "If you are really Thai, why don't you stand up?" He then threw his popcorn and a bottle of water at Chotisak.

Aggrieved, Chotisak found a policeman and sought to press charges against Nawarmin. But Nawarmin turned the tables on Chotisak, filing a lèse majesté complaint against him. Police have now followed suit, pressing formal charges against Chotisak on Tuesday.
Thailand’s lèse majesté ‑ French for the crime of insulting the king laws are among the world’s stiffest, an anachronism that grows steadily more potent as such laws lose their muscle everywhere else, And cases here are by no means rare, although in most cases the king himself pardons the wrongdoer. In state propaganda, the Thai king is treated as semi-divine and most Thais never express dissent over that view in public. Since anyone can file lèse majesté charges, many of the cases are frivolous. Politicians routinely file cases against each other as a way to discredit an opponent, and other cases are sometimes leveled against foreign correspondents seeking to explain Thailand's monarchy to the outside world.

A Swiss man was sentenced to 10 years in prison in March 2007 for throwing paint on Bhumibol's picture in Chiang Mai. He received a pardon from the king.

But as far as lèse majesté cases go, Chotisak's is more significant. Rather than involving politicians or foreigners, his case involves a Thai consciously rebelling against nationalist and royalist propaganda.

Sitting down during the anthem is my right to freedom of expression," Chotisak said in an interview through a translator. "The law doesn't say you must stand up; it says can you stand up. So it's not something that you must do."

Chotisak's case has attracted quite a bit of media attention, which is unusual for a lèse majesté case. While local newspapers typically only run wire stories about the cases in order to avoid compounding the “crime” with their own reporting, the Bangkok Post, Thailand's leading English-language daily, smacked the story on Page 1 with a picture, graphic and sidebar. About 20 other news outlets covered Chotisak’s appearance at the police station.

According to the Bangkok Post, in addition to lèse majesté, Chotisak may have violated the 1942 National Culture Act passed under a military dictator. It states: "Individuals must pay their respects to the national anthem, the Royal anthem and other anthems which are played at an official service, social ceremony or entertainment venue." Violators face a measly 100 baht fine (US$3.17) or up to a month in prison.

Chotisak says he wants laws passed under military regimes to be scrapped. He also makes a routine practice of disregarding the national anthem, which is played on radios, TV stations and public places at 8 am and 6 pm every day.

"The lèse majesté law falls under the constitution, which says that all Thais have the right to freedom of expression," said Chotisak. "Therefore, the lèse majesté law is unconstitutional."

The lèse majesté law has always been a touchy subject, mostly because anyone can bring a case without any input from the king himself. Moreover, no politician would dare propose scrapping the law, and police and prosecutors often feel the need to follow through on the charges out of fear that they might actually be violating the law by not doing so. This all made more difficult since it can barely be discussed in public.

"Somehow, Thai society has dead-ended itself, unable to go forward or back, unable to even address the extremely problematic nature of this law," David Streckfuss, one of the foremost scholars on the law, wrote last year. "Thai society has narrowed its options, leaving a single unavoidable logic of suppression: the law protects the monarchy. Anyone who questions the law must not care about protecting the monarchy. Such a person must be disloyal to the monarchy, and must be suppressed."

Whereas most caught up in the odd tangle of a lèse majesté charge just hope the issues goes away quietly, Chotisak wants the publicity. He is willing to become a martyr for a cause he believes in, even if it means going to jail for not standing up in a movie theater.

"He's very brave," said a friend of Chotisak. "Young student activists, think tank activists and some people in the general public agree with him but they don't have the guts to publicize the issue as much as him."

Thai activist faces lese majeste charge for keeping his seat

Bangkok - A former student activist has been charged with lese majeste in Thailand for refusing to stand up when the royal anthem was played at a cinema, news reports said Wednesday.
Police on Tuesday charged Chotisak Onsoong, 27, with violating Article 112 of the Criminal Code for refusing to rise when the royal anthem was played at a movie theatre last year, reported the Bangkok Post.
Article 112 makes it a criminal offence to defame, insult or threaten the Thai king and members of the royal family, setting the punishment for lese majeste at three to 15 years imprisonment.
Nawamin Witthayakul, who was sitting two seats away from Chotisak when he refused to rise, filed the lese majeste charge against him.
Chotisak, a former deputy secretary-general of the Students Federation of Thailand, said he had done nothing wrong in refusing to rise for the royal anthem.
'To not rise is not an offense against anyone,' said Chotisak, who noted that the Thai constitution guaranteed citizens the right to make a choice according to ones beliefs and faith.
It has been common practice since the 1970s for Thai cinemas to show footage of King Bhumibol Adulyadej, accompanied by the royal anthem, before screening movies. It has also been common practice, even among foreigners, to rise during the royal anthem.
King Bhumibol, 80, is the world's longest reigning monarch, and much revered among the vast majority of Thais.

What 's happen in my country !!!! It's crazy Thai extremist monarchist, in
Thailand if you're not stand may be die also, Oh!! born to be Thai, Why its so
difficult to live

Lese majeste in Thailand





Nakhonratchasima, Thailand — Thailand's most powerful political and social "hammer" may be the kingdom's lese majeste law. The law, expressed in Article 112 of the Criminal Code, states, "Whoever defames, insults or threatens the King, Queen, the Heir-apparent or the Regent, shall be punished (with) imprisonment of three to fifteen years."
Often, however, whether you are ever convicted and punished or not is a question of who you are, who you happened to offend and who is protecting your interests. The law is supposedly designed to protect the country's revered monarchy, but is often misused to silence dissent, punish social and political enemies, or to employ against foreigners when Thais would face far less severe charges. Politicians, power brokers and colluding police all benefit from the application -- or merely the threat to apply -- the lese majeste law.
The law implies that lese majeste must be determined as a fact, not that it be deemed to have taken place. Yet, time and time again, Thailand's police have pressed charges against those "deemed" to have committed an offense against the monarchy.

This occurred under the former regime of Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra when longtime foreign Thailand veterans working for the Far Eastern Economic Review wrote a piercing article that the government did not like. While Thaksin at the time protested that he had nothing to do with the witch-hunt, it was evident that he was pulling the strings. After all, his name had been mentioned in the article, with an intimation that perhaps he was not always in favor with the monarchy.

Later political events in the kingdom, including pro-Thaksin protestors attacking the home of His Majesty's Privy Council President General Prem Tinsulalonda, proved that perhaps the FEER article carried more fact than it did deemed fiction. But the writers were forced, despite global pressure against the Thai government, to shamefully apologize. The apology allowed them to remain in Thailand, but undoubtedly the experience took some of the wind out of their love-Thailand sails.

Having witnessed -- as a victim -- the misuse of the lese majesty law here in Thailand, this writer cautions foreigners first and foremost that the real danger is not merely saying the wrong thing, but in being perceived so by police or other powerful interests who themselves do not always have real national interests at stake. The higher up your accusers are, and the better connected they are with the military and police, and most importantly, with powerful politicians, the more chance you stand of being convicted.

While in 2005 His Majesty King Bhumibol Adulyadej told the Thai nation that he was not a perfect being and only human, and that he wanted to hear criticism if he did anything wrong so he could improve himself, his subjects continued misapplying the law and taking advantage of its provisions. A powerful tool to silence protests, arouse public support and justify massive armed attacks against democracy protest groups, the lese majeste law in Thailand has faced frequent and strong protest, as well as both internal and external pressures for repeal. It may be that unless the nation's monarch himself calls for repeal, the law will remain on the books for decades more.
On Sept. 20, 2007, Khun Chotisak Onsoong attended a cinema in Bangkok. When it came time, as is the custom, for patrons to rise at the beginning of the movie for the royal anthem, Chotisak remained seated. Another patron nearby, Nawamin Witthayakul, noticed and told Chotisak to rise. The latter refused, considering that it was a matter of personal choice as to how people should demonstrate their respect for the anthem and the monarchy. Afterwards Nawamin went to the theater management and demanded that they take action, but they refused.

Determined, Nawamin went to the police five days later in Pathumwan district of Bangkok and lodged a lese majeste complaint against Chotisak. It took the police seven months to finally charge Chotisak with lese majeste. For his part, the former student activist who had protested against the Sept. 19, 2006 coup, says, "We have different ways of looking at things. To not rise is not an offense against anyone. That's what I think." Released on his own cognizance, Chotisak has signed an acknowledgment of the charge and is awaiting an order to appear in criminal court. He could face jail time, but has braved the political weather at home to live free.

Thailand's media firebrand Sondhi Limthongkul, a primary leader of the country's anti-Thaksin People's Alliance for Democracy, was not forgiving, either. At a pro-democracy seminar at Thammasat University on April 25, Sondhi referred to Chotisak. Sondhi implied that given the attempts of Thaksin and his supporters to weaken and topple the monarchy, it was ominous that at this particular moment a Thai had suddenly refused to stand in respect to the king. Like his fellow subjects, Sondhi does not have any patience for those who may wish to choose whether to stand or not. An up-country Thai commented, "If he is allowed not to stand, then anyone who chooses not to will have to be accommodated." Precisely the point.

On April 11, 2007, Southeast Asian studies Ph.D. holder David Streckfuss had an article published in the Bangkok Post suggesting that perhaps it was time to repeal the country's draconian lese majeste law. Wrote Streckfuss, "With the worldwide attention on the King as the longest serving monarch, what a wonderful gift it would be for Thai society to give him or the Privy Council the discretion to take the appropriate measures needed to defend the reputation of the monarchy. Amend Section 112 of the Thai penal code by adding the clause that makes the use of the lese majeste possible 'only by order of the King or with his consent.' Otherwise, the lese majeste law in Thailand will ever be ready at hand to serve as a weapon in the political arena, always to a detriment to the institution the law intends to protect."

The suggestion that Thailand's lese majeste law be amended to where only the nation's monarch issues any such charge is a workable idea but faces overwhelming resistance in the Land of Smiles from powerful interests who have grown used to misusing the law for their own gain and others' losses. If the country's powerful police cannot yet bring themselves to repeal the law, then perhaps they can amend provisions in its enforcement to ensure that legitimate rights are protected on the one hand, and that persons filing lese majeste charges are made well aware of their obligations and possible repercussions from malicious filing.

In a document provided to Thai police on this subject, this writer asked that any individual signing a complaint of lese majeste swear that he or she has no personal conflict with the charged person, and that the person filing also accepts that should the charge be found to be malicious or without foundation, that the individual making allegations accept responsibility. Almost a year after receiving the suggestions, police have not bothered to respond. It is not in their interests to do so.
--
(Frank G. Anderson is the Thailand representative of American Citizens Abroad. He was a U.S. Peace Corps volunteer to Thailand from 1965-67, working in community development. A freelance writer and founder of northeast Thailand's first local English language newspaper, the Korat Post -- www.thekoratpost.com -- he has spent over eight years in Thailand "embedded" with the local media. He has an MBA in information management and an associate degree in construction technology. ©Copyright Frank G. Anderson.)

Sonthi Limthondkul have a hidden agenda for these movement absolutely,
before year, he told about the taboo book called "The King Never Smile", despite a litle of thai people had known about that book it was spread wide in some acadimics only. What he want ?