Free Somyot Now | Prachatai English
September 19, 2012
Human rights and labour organizations today urge that magazine editor
and human rights defender Somyot Prueksakasemsuk be immediately
released from 17-month pre-trial detention. If convicted, he faces up
to 30 years in prison under Article 112 of the Criminal Code (the
lèse-majesté law) for the publication of two articles deemed insulting
to the monarchy. The group further called on the Thai authorities to
uphold international standards of freedom of expression, and to stop
using Article 112 and arbitrary detention to criminalize or restrict
free speech.
The outcome of Somyot’s trial is a litmus test of
Thailand’s commitment to protect the rights to freedom of opinion and
expression, the group said
Somyot has been held in prison since
his arrest in April 2011, five days after he launched a petition
campaign to collect 10,000 signatures required for a parliamentary
review of lèse-majesté law. Lengthy pre-trial detention of Somyot
clearly violates Thailand’s obligations to refrain from arbitrary
detention.
On 18 September, the Thai Criminal Court cancelled a
court hearing in his case scheduled for 19 September, prolonging his
pre-trial detention indefinitely. The Criminal Court did not provide
reasons for the cancellation or a new date for the hearing.
Background
Authorities
have turned down Somyot’s eleven requests for release on bail. In
denying him provisional release, the court has not provided adequate
justifications, as required by Section 40(7) the Constitution and
Section 107 of the Criminal Procedure Code, which restrict pre-trial
detention to exceptional circumstances, and by the International
Covenant on Civil Political Rights (ICCPR), which Thailand has ratified.
During
the past two years, Thai courts have repeatedly denied bail to alleged
lèse-majesté offenders. The UN Human Rights Committee, which oversees
compliance of States with the ICCPR, has reminded States that pre-trial
detention may, in itself, be a violation of the rights to liberty and
presumption of innocence.
Thailand’s lèse-majesté law prohibits
any word or act, which “defames, insults, or threatens the King, the
Queen, the Heir-apparent, or the Regent”. The law overrides the Thai
constitution and places the country in contravention of its
international legal obligations to uphold international standards of
freedom of expression. Thai civil society groups, families of those
prosecuted under the lèse-majesté law, and United Nations human rights
experts have repeatedly called for a public debate on reform of the
lèse-majesté law. When Thailand’s human rights record was examined in
October 2011 during the Universal Periodic Review of the UN Human Rights
Council, its member states addressed more than a dozen recommendations
to amend or repeal both the lèse-majesté law and the 2007 Computer
Crimes Act that criminalizes online defamation under the same
provision. Four of the alleged lèse-majesté offenders, including
Somyot, have pending requests to the Constitutional Court to rule on the
constitutionality of Article 112. On 19 September, Somyot was expected
to learn if the Constitutional Court had ruled on whether Thailand’s
lèse-majesté law complies with guarantees of freedom of expression and
the press in the 2007 Constitution.
The UN Special Rapporteur on
the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and
expression “reiterate[d] the call to all States to decriminalize
defamation” in his report (A/HRC/17/27) to the UN Human Right Council in
May 2011. The UN Declaration on Human Rights Defenders guarantees the
right “[t]o submit to governmental bodies and agencies and organizations
concerned with public affairs criticism and proposals for improving
their functioning and to draw attention to any aspect of their work that
may impede the realization of human rights.” Thailand has increasingly
criminalized writers and editors of publications that carry articles
deemed offensive to the monarchy.
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