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Sunday 22 February 2015

Thai pair jailed

Thai pair jailed for insulting monarchy in student play


A Thai court has sentenced a man and a woman to two years and six months in jail each for "damaging the monarchy".
Patiwat Saraiyaem, 23, and Pornthip Munkong, 26, had pleaded guilty to breaking strict lese majeste laws which protect the royals from any insults.
The charges related to a play they performed at a university in 2013.
Thailand's lese majeste laws are the world's strictest, but critics say the military government is increasingly using them to silence dissent.
The two were convicted on one count of lese majeste which carries a maximum sentence of 15 years in prison. The sentence was reduced because both admitted guilt, the judge said.
'Not afraid'
The BBC's Jonathan Head, who is at the court in Bangkok, says the two were handcuffed together on arrival, one wearing leg shackles.
The mother of Pornthip Munkong, an activist who directed the play, was in tears as the sentence was read out.
Pornthip Munkong told reporters ahead of the decision that she was not afraid of going to prison.
The play, called Wolf Bride, was set in a fantasy kingdom and featured a fictional king and his advisor.
It marked the 40th anniversary of a student pro-democracy protest that was crushed by a military regime.
However, the full details have not been widely reported because under the laws media coverage which repeat details of the offense is considered the same as the original statement.
It was performed at Bangkok's Thammasat University in October 2013 while Patiwat Saraiyaem was a student and Pornthip Munkong had recently graduated. The pair were not arrested until the following August and have been held in custody ever since.

Thailand's lese majeste laws
Article 112 of criminal code says anyone who "defames, insults or threatens the king, the queen, the heir-apparent or the regent" will be punished with up to 15 years in prison
Law remained largely unchanged since 1908
Use widened in recent years, snaring academics, journalists, policemen, activists and even a 61-year-old grandfather
                                                                                                                                                    

Human rights groups say there has been a rise in royal defamation cases since the military seized power in a coup in May last year.
Our correspondent says 15 people have been charged with lese majeste since then.
More than 90 cases are being investigated and police are aiming to bring charges in about half of them, he adds.
Recent convictions include a taxi driver jailed for two-and-a-half years after his passenger recorded their conversation.
A student was also sentenced to the same amount of prison time for defaming the monarchy in a Facebook post.
The military has more widely suppressed dissent by detaining opponents, banning protests and censoring the media.
Thailand's King Bhumibol Adulyadej, 87, is given an almost god-like status by many Thais. He has been on the throne for six decades, making him the world's longest serving monarch.

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