this pressed: Flash – Two Thais await sentence for ‘insulting’ royals in play – France 24

AFP/File | Thai cadets hold flags as they walk in front of the Grand palace on the occasion of King Bhumibol Adulyadej’s 87th birthday in Bangkok on December 5, 2014

BANGKOK (AFP) –

Two young Thais accused of insulting the monarchy in a university play braced for sentencing Monday as the ruling junta intensifies its crackdown on perceived royal slurs under the kingdom’s controversial lese majeste law.

Student Patiwat Saraiyaem, 23, and activist Porntip Mankong, 26, pleaded guilty to defamation after their arrest last August, nearly a year after “The Wolf Bride”, a satire set in a fictional kingdom, was performed at Bangkok’s Thammasat University.

They were each charged with one count of lese majeste linked to the play, which marked the 40th anniversary of a pro-democracy student protest at the university that was brutally crushed by the military regime in October 1973.

Police are hunting for at least six others involved in the performance for allegedly violating “112” — the feared section of the Thai criminal code which carries up to 15 years in jail for each count of insulting the king, queen, heir or regent.

Of those on the wanted list, at least two have fled Thailand, joining dozens of academics, activists and political opponents of the coup in self-exile amid a surge in royal defamation cases since the military seized power in May.

Thailand’s King Bhumibol Adulyadej, 87, is revered by many in the country as a demi-god and shielded by one of the world’s most draconian royal defamation laws.

via Flash – Two Thais await sentence for ‘insulting’ royals in play – France 24.

Leave a Reply: (What... You're shy?)