Saksith Saiyasombut & Siam Voices
The Royal Thai Navy has filed defamation charges against international journalists for their reports on authorities being involved in human trafficking of ethnic Rohingya refugees. The move sends a chilling reminder to the media about the dismal state of press freedom in Thailand, the easy exploitation of flawed laws and how little outside inquiry Thailand’s military tolerates.
The Royal Thai Navy has filed defamation charges against international journalists for their reports on authorities being involved in human trafficking of ethnic Rohingya refugees. The move sends a chilling reminder to the media about the dismal state of press freedom in Thailand, the easy exploitation of flawed laws and how little outside inquiry Thailand’s military tolerates.
Rohingya migrants sit on a police van in southern Thailand. Pic: AP
Ever since the deadlypersecution of the Rohingya people, an ethnic minority denied
citizenship in Burma, in 2012 that caused tens of thousands to flee, mostly on
frail and overcrowded vessels on the Andaman Sea, the plight of Rohingya
refugees in Thailand has been well documented in the past 12 months*. Reportsof abuse, rape, inhumane detention conditions and human trafficking have
persistently accompanied the coverage of the refugees in Thailand.
A deadline imposed by the Thai government to find and transfer the
refugees to another country passed in July with no results and further
developments being made, leaving the Rohingyas in legal limbo.
While this story is
almost exclusively covered in foreign media and mostly met with apathy in
the mainstream Thai media, Phuket Wan has been regularly
reporting and unearthing accounts of the mistreatment of Rohingya people,
including sellingto human traffickers by Thai authorities. In July, Phuket
Wan wasquoting from aninvestigative special report by the Reuters news agency that
accuses certain sections of the Royal Thai Navy of actively taking part in the
smuggling of Rohingya refugees.
This was followed up
by Reuters withanother special report in December that also carries “startling admissions”
by the DSI chief Tharit Pengdit and the Deputy Commissioner General of the
Royal Thai Police Maj-Gen Chatchawal Suksomjit over the existence of
illegal camps in southern Thailand. In the aftermath of the coverage, boththe United Nations and the United States have called on Thailand to investigatethe findings of the Reuters report.
This is how the
Royal Thai Navy responded to these accusations:
A captain acting on
behalf of the Royal Thai Navy has accused two Phuketwan journalists
of damaging the reputation of the service and of breaching the Computer Crimes
Act. Two other journalists from the Reuters news agency are
expected to face similar charges shortly.
The Phuketwan journalists,
Alan Morison and Chutima Sidasathian, denied the charges and were fingerprinted
when they presented themselves today at Vichit Police Station, south of Phuket
City. They are due to reappear on December 24. The pair face a maximum jail
term of five years and/or a fine of up to 100,000, baht
It’s
believed to be the first time an arm of the military in Thailand has sued
journalists for criminal defamation using the controversial Computer Crimes
Act. (…)
In response to
presentation of the charges today, Alan Morison and Chutima Sidasathian issued
the following statement:
(…) We
are shocked to learn now that the Navy is using a controversial law to
sue Phuketwan for criminal
defamation. The allegations in the article are not made by Phuketwan.
They are made by the highly-respected Reuters news agency, following a
thorough investigation. (…)
The Rohingya
have no spokesperson, no leader, but through Phuketwan’s ongoing
coverage, the torment of these people continues to be revealed. Their
forced exodus from Burma is a great tragedy. Yet how they are treated in the
seas off Thailand and in Thailand remains a constant puzzle.
We wish the Royal
Thai Navy would clear its reputation by explaining precisely what is happening
to the Rohingya in the Andaman Sea and in Thailand. By instead
using a controversial law against us, the Navy is, we believe, acting out of
character.
We can only wonder
why a good organisation finds it necessary to take such unusual action instead
of making a telephone call or holding a media conference.
“NavyCaptain Uses Computer Crimes Act to Sue Journalists for Criminal Defamation“,
Phuket Wan, December 18, 2013
This is an extremely
worrying development. The navy is not only using the libel law against the two
journalists, but also the controversial Computer Crimes Act of 2007 (CCA).
Thanks to the CCA’s flawedand vague wording, it opens up the possibility for arbitrary charges
against all online users to be held liable not only for their own content, but
also for the content of third parties that the user is hosting. Recently, the
Appeal Court upheldthe suspended sentence against Chiranuch Premchaiporn, the webmaster of the
news website Prachatai, for not deleting web comments deemed lèse
majesté quickly enough.
Another aspect is
that it also shows that allegations of human trafficking are hardly being
investigated, let alone by somebody outside of the military. After allegationsof human trafficking against army officers earlier this January, an
inquiry found the men at no fault but they were transferred out to another
region nonetheless.
Earlier this year,
we blogged about thethen-defence minister Sukumpol Suwanatat’s “fear of too much pressfreedom” and this move again reflects the armed forces’ self-image
that is still being maintained until today: an essential part of the Thai power
apparatus that is not to be questioned or criticized, especially by outsiders.
*NOTE: The
plight of the Rohingya refugees will be highlighted as part of a special 2013
year-in-review series starting December 26, 2013 on Siam Voices.
Source: Asian Correspondent
Source: Asian Correspondent
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