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Author Topic: In Thailand, insulting the King's dog could get you nearly 40 years in prison.  (Read 685 times)
galdur (OP)
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December 15, 2015, 12:37:27 PM
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In Thailand, insulting the King's dog could get you nearly 40 years in prison.

Thai military courts said he wrote "sarcastic" posts on social media

A Thai man faces up to 37 years in prison for mocking the king’s dog over social media, an apparent violation of Thailand’s stringent laws against insults aimed at the country’s monarchy.

Authorities arrested factory worker Thanakorn Siripaiboon at his home in suburban Bangkok last week and charged him with writing a “sarcastic” Internet post about Tongdaeng, the mongrel owned by King Bhumibol Adulyadej, as well as with sedition and insulting the King, reports the New York Times.

The Thai military, which seized control of the country in a coup last year, did not specify the exact insult Thanakorn used.

Tongdaeng, whose name means copper, is beloved in Thailand, the Times reports. Last week, the No. 2 film at Thai box offices was Khun Tongdaeng: The Inspirations, an animated picture inspired by a book King Bhumibol wrote in 2002 about his pet.

Thanakorn’s case is the latest concerning a breach of Thailand’s controversial lèse majesté laws — the scope of which, experts say, has broadened considerably in recent years. Last December, two Thai students in their 20s pleaded guilty to insulting the monarchy after staging a play about a fictitious king.

Journalists on Twitter noted that the Times report on the charges against Thanakorn did not appear in editions of the newspaper printed and sold in Thailand. It is the third time this month a blank space has appeared in lieu of content in the Thai edition, the Guardian reports: once on Dec. 1, replacing a story on the struggling Thai economy, and again three days later, instead of an opinion piece on the Thai royal family’s wealth.

In each instance, the newspaper noted that the articles were “removed by [their] printer in Thailand” and that “editorial staff had no role in [their] removal.”

http://time.com/4148911/thailand-bhumibol-tongdaeng-lese-majeste/

bitsmichel
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December 15, 2015, 06:26:34 PM
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The king and royals in Thailand have a lot of power. Bad words usually go in heavy and unjust punishment.

zenitzz
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December 15, 2015, 09:24:32 PM
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Tongdaeng has been revered as a model of how Thais should behave towards Bhumibol, the longest serving King in Thailand’s history.........They want the Thai people to behave like dogs?Huh
Xubu
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December 15, 2015, 09:35:11 PM
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So what, just stay away there. They eat dogs.
galdur (OP)
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December 15, 2015, 09:58:15 PM
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Thanakorn's lawyer, Anon Numpa, said the military did not reveal exactly what the insult directed at the dog was, but labelled it "nonsense" that the law should be extended to include the pet.

He added that the rules of what's considered lèse-majesté have broadened considerably in recent years. Last week, Thai authorities said they are investigating the U.S. Ambassador to Thailand, Glyn Davies, for also violating the law in a speech he made. The speech addressed lèse-majesté itself, where Davies had allegedly expressed concern about the heavy sentences handed down to people convicted of violating it.

Fears of being hauled up for lèse-majesté have expanded to businesses, too. The New York Times' printer in Thailand has opted to print a blank space in the newspaper's Thai editions over potentially prickly articles about Thailand. At the start of this month, it blanked out an article discussing the Thai royal family's wealth, and later a story discussing the Thai economy.

Last week's story on Thanakorn's arrest was also blanked out — the third time it's happened this month....

mashable




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December 15, 2015, 10:18:26 PM
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He cannot insult the royal and he insulted the royal dog. But he is still charged after Lèse majesté. Check Lèse majesté it is a very strange law (to the US people) in Thailand.
Xubu
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December 15, 2015, 10:20:57 PM
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Okay in Thailand you cannot insult dogs, but you can rape and misuse underaged girls without a problem. Strange country.
shiryu
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December 15, 2015, 10:43:40 PM
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This king looks like an imbecile. Oh dear being put on trial for insulting his dog ,Thailand the country of enlightenment has surely regressed by the absolute rule of a tinpot king.
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December 16, 2015, 06:30:02 AM
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Tongdaeng has been revered as a model of how Thais should behave towards Bhumibol, the longest serving King in Thailand’s history. They want the Thai people to behave like dogs?
bitsmichel
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December 16, 2015, 06:52:49 AM
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This king looks like an imbecile. Oh dear being put on trial for insulting his dog ,Thailand the country of enlightenment has surely regressed by the absolute rule of a tinpot king.
Do the Thai not eat dogs? I heard something about this

mohsin qureshi
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December 16, 2015, 03:52:53 PM
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Oh my God, 40 years prison, just insulting a bloody Dog, is this humanity??? Dog is superior then a man. Alas ...
Backside walkaround
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December 16, 2015, 03:56:18 PM
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Thus if I call it a cunting bitch, will they extradite me?  Oh Thailand, land of hot chicks and stupid laws...

If the original Backside walkaround can prove to me they are the old owner of this account, I can update the email address to the email address of their choosing.
Backside walkaround has lost access to their account as they used someone else's email address to sign up, and the owner of the email address got tired of random email notifications from this site after a few months and reset the password.
galdur (OP)
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December 16, 2015, 04:01:18 PM
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Freedom of speech reaches 'new low' in junta-ruled Thailand

By Amy Sawitta Lefevre

Related Stories

International NY Times blocked in Thailand over king article Associated Press
No NYT edition in Thailand after article on king's health AFP
Special Report: Thai junta hits royal critics with record jail time Reuters

BANGKOK (Reuters) - Thailand's military seized power last year with a promise to eventually restore
democracy. But a crackdown against critics of the monarchy and junta suggest the country is locked on a darker trajectory, say U.N. officials and human rights activists.

On Sunday, a student was taken from hospital by plainclothes agents and charged with defaming Thailand's widely revered royalty.

On Monday, it emerged that a factory worker was charged with sedition and mocking King Bhumibol Adulyadej's dog. If found guilty, he faces decades in prison.

And on Tuesday, a military court sentenced a single mother to seven years in jail for posting material on the Internet insulting to the monarchy.

Human Rights Watch said the cases underscore how freedom of speech has reached a new low in the Southeast Asian country.

Since taking power in 2014, the military has made full use of Article 44 of the interim constitution which gives junta leader Prayuth Chan-ocha absolute power to give any order deemed necessary to prevent acts seen as undermining national security.

It also allows soldiers to detain people for up to seven days without a court warrant.....

https://news.yahoo.com/freedom-speech-reaches-low-junta-ruled-thailand-110006420.html

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