spacer.png, 0 kB

AHRC in News

Home
Computer crime law as lese-majesty substitute (2009-11-20) Print E-mail
Friday, 20 November 2009
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

AHRC-STM-229-2009

November 20, 2009

A Statement by the Asian Human Rights Commission

THAILAND: Computer crime law as lese-majesty substitute

In recent days police in Thailand arrested and charged another person
over causing a decline in the stock market by spreading rumours
through the Internet about the king's health.

According to news reports, Tassaporn Ratawongsa, 42, a radiologist at
the Thonburi Hospital was arrested on 18 November 2009 and charged
under section 14 of the Computer Crime Act BE 2550 (2007) with
distributing "false computer data in a manner that is likely to damage
the country's security or cause a public panic". She is the fourth
person to have been charged in this manner over rumours in October
about the health of the king that caused the stock market to drop
dramatically. The other three are Katha Pajariyapong, 37, and
Thiranant Vipuchant, 43, both arrested on November 1; and, Somjet
Itthiworakul, 38, arrested on November 3.

The four join the director of online independent news site Prachatai,
Chiranuch Premchaiporn, who is facing a raft of charges over comments
that readers posted to the site, not anything that she herself wrote
or did, by virtue of section 15 of the same law that, "Any service
provider intentionally supporting or consenting to an offence under
Section 14 within a computer system under their control shall be
subject to the same penalty as that imposed upon a person committing
an offence under Section 14."

All of these accused face imprisonment of up to five years for their
alleged offences. Another Internet user from Thailand who made the
mistake of thinking that he had relative freedom to do as he pleased
in cyberspace who is already serving his term is Suwicha Takor, who
earlier in the year was given a 10-year sentence, reduced from 20
because of his guilty plea, for posting pictures deemed offensive to
the monarchy.

It is in Suwicha's case that the intersection between what is
superficially going on in these other cases and what is actually going
on becomes obvious. Suwicha was sentenced to 20 years because he was
convicted not only of so-called computer crimes but also of
lese-majesty.

In fact, these other persons could also have been charged with
lese-majesty under the Penal Code, but instead the authorities have
chosen to target them only with the use of the new computer law.

Is the Computer Crime Act being used as a de facto lese-majesty law?
Whether or not people in the administration have this as a policy,
these cases suggest it is headed that way.

Throughout 2009 Thailand has attracted a huge amount of negative
publicity over the cases against persons critical of its royal family,
or persons claiming to act on the royals' behalf. Attempts to stifle
this negative publicity have only backfired, generating even greater
amounts of bad press and bad feelings. The extent of this sensitivity
was impressed upon the Asian Human Rights Commission in May when the
justice minister, Pirapan Salirathavibhaga, in a letter responding to
interventions in the case of Suwicha denied that Thailand even has a
lese-majesty law:

"Offences against the King, the Queen, the Heir-Apparent or the Regent
are considered offences relating to the security of the Kingdom, not
'lese-majesty'... I am certain that each state as well as Thailand has
its own way of interpreting what constitutes offences relating to
national security. Therefore, whoever violates the law of the Kingdom
will be fairly charged and prosecuted according to the law of the
Kingdom."

The awkwardness of the minister's proposition, which is anyhow
incorrect--the Oxford dictionary defines "lese-majesty" as the
insulting of a sovereign, which is precisely one of the criteria for
an offence against the king under section 112 of the Penal
Code--speaks to the difficulties that the government of Thailand has
been having with lese-majesty and suggests why it may be looking for
other analogous categories of crimes.

The Computer Crime Act is an excellent substitute. The so-called law
was passed in the final hours of the military-appointed proxy
legislature following the 2006 coup, and as the AHRC made clear from
the start, was designed as a tool to suppress dissent, not responsibly
deal with Internet crime in Thailand. Its ambiguous provisions,
notably the section under which all these persons have been charged,
allow for the prosecution of any type of thought crime on the
disingenuous pretext that the crime is one of technology rather than
one of expression or of ideas. Therefore, the state can claim that it
is bringing people to court for one type of crime, while sending a
clear message to a society that the real offence is altogether
different.

With fewer journalists and editors in Thailand willing or wanting to
take up many issues of importance to the public, it is unsurprising
that more and more people are turning to the Internet to communicate.
The substituting of lese-majesty with computer crime offences may seem
to the authorities to be superficially easy but it will not do
anything to reduce the global interest in the role of Thailand's
monarchy and future prospects for its lost democracy. On the contrary,
by prosecuting these persons the government has only shifted from one
type of high-profile crime to another. Internet offences are a subject
of interest to hundreds of millions of web users all around the world,
and it would be foolish of the authorities to think that by
prosecuting these persons under the Computer Crime Act they will do
anything to lessen the attention paid to the hand that the protectors
of the monarchy in Thailand have in all of this. For its own good and
the good of its kingdom, the government of Thailand would be smart to
find a way to drop these cases as quickly and quietly as possible.
 
< Prev   Next >
spacer.png, 0 kB