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Koh Tao Murder Timeline

 

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Soldiers, Police Arrest Condominium Manager for Beating Dog

Police inspect the crime scene several hours before they returned to arrest the condominium's manager on 13 July 2015.

CHONBURI — A group of soldiers and policemen raided a condominium in the resort town of Pattaya today to arrest the building's manager for allegedly beating a stray dog on the property.

Thawat Pinyipyoke, 50, was arrested at Pattaya City Resort Condominium this morning by police officers from Pattaya City Police Station and soldiers from 14th Army District. 

Thawat told police – who were responding to a complaint from local residents – that he ordered his staff to drive off several stray dogs that regularly gathered on the grounds of the condominium and rummaged through garbage bins, attracting complaints from the building’s occupants.

He  said he initially contacted Pattaya city administration about the problem but officials never addressed the issue.

According to Thawat, some of the dogs resisted the eviction, so he and his staff captured them in sacks in an attempt to transport them off the property. However, one of the dogs jumped out of the sack, so he used a stick to beat the dog on the head.

"I did not intend to harm or commit any cruelty against the animal," Thawat told police officers, adding that he is willing to pay all medical bills for the dog. 

The dog was sent to a local animal hospital and is being treated for severe head injuries.

Police say they have charged Thawat with violating the 2014 Prevention of Animal Cruelty and Provision of Animal Welfare Act, which carries a maximum penalty of two years for prison for cruel or inhumane treatment of animals. 

Police added that they have not charged any the eight Burmese staff who helped with the effort because only Thawat confessed to beating the dog, and there is currently no evidence linking the Burmese men to the crime. 

 

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NGOs in Cambodia to Face Regulation

Cambodian police officers block protesters during a rally in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, 13 July 2015.  EPA/KHEM SOVANNARA

PHNOM PENH (DPA) — Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in Cambodia will come under a new regulatory system approved by the lower house of parliament Monday, amid criticism by human rights groups and Western embassies.

All organizations in the country will be required to register, remain politically neutral, and respect Cambodia's "culture, traditions and customs," according to a draft seen earlier by dpa.

Any organization that threatens "political security, stability and order" could be refused registration or fined.

International rights groups have expressed concern that the law will be used to repress political dissent, and said it violates freedom of assembly.

The European Parliament on Thursday adopted a resolution urging Cambodia to rewrite the law with more input from civil society.

The latest requirements "impose unwarranted restrictions on the rights to freedom of association and expression," it said, "and create legal grounds for arbitrarily closing or denying registration to politically disfavoured NGOs."

Phnom Penh said the move was necessary to manage the country's more than 4,000 currently unregulated NGOs, and that it consulted 500 individuals and several embassies in the course of drafting the law.

"The US, UK and other countries have an NGO law. Why not in Cambodia?" government spokesman Phay Siphan said.

In June, Prime Minister Hun Sen dismissed foreign criticism as "a violation of Cambodia's sovereignty" and called for "respect for Cambodia's decisions as an independent state and a UN member," Radio Free Asia reported.

Monday's vote was boycotted by the opposition Cambodian National Rescue Party, whose spokesman Yim Sovann said the law did not reflect "the will of civil society."

After passing the National Assembly, the bill was to go to the Senate and then to the king for final signing into law, which are expected.

(Reporting by Erin Hale)

 

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Martial Court Approves Bail for Woman Accused of Spreading Prayuth Rumor

Activists light candles outside Bangkok Remand Prison to demand the release of Rinda Paruechabutr, who has been accused of spreading a rumor about junta chairman Gen. Prayuth Chan-ohca, 12 July 2015.

BANGKOK — A martial court has reversed its ruling to allow a single mother to be released on bail while she awaits trial for allegedly spreading a rumor about junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha.

Police say Rinda Paruechabutr, 45, started a spurious rumor on social media that Gen. Prayuth had transferred 10 billion baht to an offshore bank account in Singapore. She is facing up to twelve years in prison on charges of violating the Computer Crime Act, inciting unrest, and causing panic.

She was arrested on 9 July and kept in prison for three days after Bangkok’s martial court ordered her to be jailed while she awaited trial.

However, the court issued a new ruling today to approve Rinda’s request for bail, setting her bond money at 100,000 baht, Matichon reported. The judge reportedly said Rinda was unlikely to flee the country, and had to take care of her two children outside the prison.

Rinda became the sole guardian of her children, ages 7 and 16, after her husband passed away in 2012.

Police say she belongs to a local chapter of the Redshirt movement – which opposed the May 2014 coup – in Pathum Thani province. 

Under the conditions of her release, Rinda is barred from leaving the country or participating in any political campaigns.

The ruling came after 30 people gathered outside the entrance to Bangkok Remand Prison last night to hold a vigil for Rinda and what they described as "other political prisoners." The gathering was organized by several pro-democracy groups, including the New Democracy Movement, Resistant Citizens, and Thai Lawyers for Human Rights. 

Arnon Nampha, a human rights lawyer and member of Resistant Citizens group, said he joined the rally to insist that civilians not be sent to stand trial in martial courts.

Gen. Prayuth's decision to grant military courts jurisdiction over all cases that "affect national security" has been widely condemned by human rights groups. At least 140 civilians are currently facing trial in martial courts, where military officers sit as judges and appeals are not possible.  

Songtham Kaewpanpruk, a member of the New Democracy Movement who attended last night's rally, told reporters he believes the junta should listen to criticism from the people.

"We demand that Mrs. Rinda be granted bail. She's not a threat to any national security," said Songtham, who is facing a separate trial in military court for participating in a pro-democracy demonstration last month. "She's just a small woman. She has not done anything evil, like stage a coup." 

A representative of the protesters read a joint statement urging authorities to drop the charges against Rinda, and to "give justice to all political prisoners." The statement also demanded Gen. Prayuth step down from his position as Prime Minister to take responsibility for the deterioration of civil rights in Thailand under his military regime. 

Security officers observed the rally without interfering until the protesters dispersed peacefully from the scene at around 8 pm. 

Speaking to reporters today, government spokesperson Maj.Gen. Sansern Kaewkamnerd denied that Rinda was a "political prisoner."

"This matter is not about politics, even though some people try to fan the news that she is a [prisoner] in political case," said Maj.Gen. Sansern. "She is involved in criminal offense for defaming other people."

He said Gen. Prayuth is concerned that false allegations about government agencies or national figures could damage Thailand’s reputation abroad.

"Gen. Prayuth has insisted that things will only improve only if the country is stable and has earned confidence from inside and outside Thailand," Maj.Gen. Sansern said. "Everything is connected. Therefore, I ask every side to be more conscious about doing this sort of thing, because it will affect the confidence of people inside and outside the country." 

At a police press conference last week, Rinda said she posted the message after someone texted in to her through the chat application LINE, but insisted that she had no intention to damage the country.

"I think that, as a citizen, I have the rights to criticize and express my opinion, since the Prime Minister is a public figure," Rinda said. "But I concede that my words affect other people. So I'd like to warn other people who use social media to be careful, because this is a sensitive issue." 

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Martial Court Approves Bail for Woman Accused of Spreading Prayuth Rumor

Activists gather outside Bangkok Remand Prison to demand release of Rinda Paruechabutr, who has been accused of spreading a rumor about junta chairman Gen. Prayuth Chan-ohca, 12 July 2015.

BANGKOK — A martial court has reversed its ruling to allow a single mother to be released on bail while she awaits trial for allegedly spreading a rumor about junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha.

Police say Rinda Paruechabutr, 45, started a spurious rumor on social media that Gen. Prayuth had transferred 10 billion baht to an offshore bank account in Singapore. She is facing up to twelve years in prison on charges of violating the Computer Crime Act, inciting unrest, and causing panic.

She was arrested on 9 July and kept in prison for three days after Bangkok’s martial court ordered her to be jailed while she awaited trial.

However, the court issued a new ruling today to approve Rinda’s request for bail, setting her bond money at 100,000 baht, Matichon reported. The judge reportedly said Rinda was unlikely to flee the country, and had to take care of her two children outside the prison.

Rinda became the sole guardian of her children, ages 7 and 16, after her husband passed away in 2012.

Police say she belongs to a local chapter of the Redshirt movement – which opposed the May 2014 coup – in Pathum Thani province. 

Under the conditions of her release, Rinda is barred from leaving the country or participating in any political campaigns.

The ruling came after 30 people gathered outside the entrance to Bangkok Remand Prison last night to hold a vigil for Rinda and what they described as "other political prisoners." The gathering was organized by several pro-democracy groups, including the New Democracy Movement, Resistant Citizens, and Thai Lawyers for Human Rights. 

Arnon Nampha, a human rights lawyer and member of Resistant Citizens group, said he joined the rally to insist that civilians not be sent to stand trial in martial courts.

Gen. Prayuth's decision to grant military courts jurisdiction over all cases that "affect national security" has been widely condemned by human rights groups. At least 140 civilians are currently facing trial in martial courts, where military officers sit as judges and appeals are not possible.  

Songtham Kaewpanpruk, a member of the New Democracy Movement who attended last night's rally, told reporters he believes the junta should listen to criticism from the people.

"We demand that Mrs. Rinda be granted bail. She's not a threat to any national security," said Songtham, who is facing a separate trial in military court for participating in a pro-democracy demonstration last month. "She's just a small woman. She has not done anything evil, like stage a coup." 

A representative of the protesters read a joint statement urging authorities to drop the charges against Rinda, and to "give justice to all political prisoners." The statement also demanded Gen. Prayuth step down from his position as Prime Minister to take responsibility for the deterioration of civil rights in Thailand under his military regime. 

Security officers observed the rally without interfering until the protesters dispersed peacefully from the scene at around 8 pm. 

Speaking to reporters today, government spokesperson Maj.Gen. Sansern Kaewkamnerd denied that Rinda was a "political prisoner."

"This matter is not about politics, even though some people try to fan the news that she is a [prisoner] in political case," said Maj.Gen. Sansern. "She is involved in criminal offense for defaming other people."

He said Gen. Prayuth is concerned that false allegations about government agencies or national figures could damage Thailand’s reputation abroad.

"Gen. Prayuth has insisted that things will only improve only if the country is stable and has earned confidence from inside and outside Thailand," Maj.Gen. Sansern said. "Everything is connected. Therefore, I ask every side to be more conscious about doing this sort of thing, because it will affect the confidence of people inside and outside the country." 

At a police press conference last week, Rinda said she posted the message after someone texted in to her through the chat application LINE, but insisted that she had no intention to damage the country.

"I think that, as a citizen, I have the rights to criticize and express my opinion, since the Prime Minister is a public figure," Rinda said. "But I concede that my words affect other people. So I'd like to warn other people who use social media to be careful, because this is a sensitive issue." 

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Lack of Evidence, Local Media Coverage Adds to Mystery of Koh Tao Murder

Nakhon Chompuchat (L) and Andy Hall (R) speaking to reporters outside the court on 9 July 2015.

BANGKOK — The first week of the trial of two Burmese men accused of murdering British tourists on a Thai island last year has done little to shed light on a case that has been shrouded in mystery from the start.

Zaw Lin and Wai Phyo, both 22, have been charged with murder, rape, and theft over the deaths of British travelers David Miller, 24, and Hannah Witheridge, 23. The tourists’ badly beaten bodies were found on Koh Tao’s Sairee beach in the early morning of 15 September 2014.

The gruesome murder shocked the idyllic resort island and captured the attention of the foreign press, who detailed police’s every stumble in a wayward investigation that ended with the arrest of Zaw Lin and Wai Phyo several weeks later. 

The suspects initially confessed after being interrogated by police without a professional interpreter or lawyer, but later declared their innocence and said they were tortured. They could face the death penalty if convicted.

Suspicions that the Burmese men were used as scapegoats to wrap up a case that was threatening to harm Thailand’s tourist industry were compounded last year by reports of locals refusing the speak to journalists, citing fears of “powerful families” on the 21 km2 island.

Despite hopes that the first round of witness examinations last week would provide clarity on the murder, questions remain about what police have described as their “watertight” case, and rumors about a suspected cover-up continue to flourish.

'Used up evidence'

In response to the defense team’s repeated calls for access to forensic evidence that the prosecution said links Zaw Lin and Wai Phyo to the rape and murder, police revealed in court that swabs taken from semen found in Witheridge’s body are no longer available because they were “used up” in the original testing, which was conducted privately.

“For police to say they don’t have these materials completely undermines the credibility of their investigation,” said Andy Hall, a migrants' rights activist from the UK who is assisting the defendants.

The only evidence available for the re-examination approved by the Koh Samui court on Friday are the sharp garden hoe allegedly used in the murder, a shoe, sock, and bags from the scene. Last week, a partially blind Burmese beach cleaner told the court he spotted the garden hoe at the scene before police arrived, and returned the tool to its normal spot nearby. Upon police's request, he later retrieved the hoe, which he said he was unaware was covered in blood.

“The garden hoe yielded no DNA traces and no fingerprints, according to police,” said the defendants’ lawyer, Nakhon Chompuchat. “But we think there should be something left.”

The defense has requested the remaining evidence be re-tested by the Central Forensic Institute, an agency administered by the Ministry of Justice.

"We want an independent agency to retest [the evidence]," said Nakhon, the lawyer representing the accused. "Not the police, because the police are intent on sending the suspects to jail. And their method is neither consistent nor transparent. Only two people were present for the entire process: a police officer and a police doctor. There were no  photographs of the process, either. When we mentioned this in the court, they quipped that we have been watching too much CSI."

An officer at the police station that oversees Koh Tao said he was unable to comment because he has been strictly ordered by his superiors not to speak on the record while the trial is ongoing.

Hush-hush local coverage 

In addition to the “used up” evidence, suspicions about police’s case against the Burmese men have been fanned by a lack attention from the Thai press.

“I wonder if there's any attempt by Thai media to cover-up the trial, because there's been so little news reports about it,” Nakhon told Khaosod English.

Some foreign reporters commented on the lack of a Thai media presence at last week's court hearings, which Hall said was only attended by 2-3 Thai journalists, compared to 15-20 reporters from foreign news outlets.

“In the beginning of this case I had the Thai media calling me 24 hours a day,” said Hall. “[Since the trial] I have not had one Thai media language person contact me. Not one. I am shocked.”

Most of Thailand’s mainstream newspapers have provided scant coverage of the court hearings, solely relying on quotes provided by police officers.

Reporters have also been barred from taking notes during the trial, which has led to further confusion. According to Hall, court officials said they decided to prohibit note-taking in order to ensure that the media did not take and report “inaccurate” notes.

“The justification doesn’t make much sense to me,” he said, adding that the Thailand's criminal justice system is critically weakened by the lack of verbatim records of court proceedings.

Relatives of Miller and Witheridge flew back to the UK this weekend after attending the first court session, while the mothers’ of the two Burmese defendants are seeking to secure visas to attend the trial next week. 

The prosecution’s second round of witness examinations is scheduled to start on 22 July, with a verdict expected in October. 

Timeline of the Koh Tao murder investigation (click to expand)

CORRECTION: The beach cleaner who removed the garden hoe from the crime scene did not tell the court he also washed the tool, as was originally reported.

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Lack of Evidence, Local Media Coverage Adds to Mystery of Koh Tao Murder

Police bring Zaw Lin and Wai Phyo to Koh Samui court on 9 July 2015.

BANGKOK — The first week of the trial of two Burmese men accused of murdering British tourists on a Thai island last year has done little to shed light on a case that has been shrouded in mystery from the start.

Zaw Lin and Wai Phyo, both 22, have been charged with murder, rape, and theft over the deaths of British travelers David Miller, 24, and Hannah Witheridge, 23. The tourists’ badly beaten bodies were found on Koh Tao’s Sairee beach in the early morning of 15 September 2014.

The gruesome murder shocked the idyllic resort island and captured the attention of the foreign press, who detailed police’s every stumble in a wayward investigation that ended with the arrest of Zaw Lin and Wai Phyo several weeks later. 

The suspects initially confessed after being interrogated by police without a professional interpreter or lawyer, but later declared their innocence and said they were tortured. They could face the death penalty if convicted.

Suspicions that the Burmese men were used as scapegoats to wrap up a case that was threatening to harm Thailand’s tourist industry were compounded last year by reports of locals refusing the speak to journalists, citing fears of “powerful families” on the 21 km2 island.

Despite hopes that the first round of witness examinations last week would provide clarity on the murder, questions remain about what police have described as their “watertight” case, and rumors about a suspected cover-up continue to flourish.

'Used up evidence'

In response to the defense team’s repeated calls for access to forensic evidence that the prosecution said links Zaw Lin and Wai Phyo to the rape and murder, police revealed in court that swabs taken from semen found in Witheridge’s body are no longer available because they were “used up” in the original testing, which was conducted privately.

“For police to say they don’t have these materials completely undermines the credibility of their investigation,” said Andy Hall, a migrants' rights activist from the UK who is assisting the defendants.

The only evidence available for the re-examination approved by the Koh Samui court on Friday are the sharp garden hoe allegedly used in the murder, a shoe, sock, and bags from the scene. Last week, a partially blind Burmese beach cleaner told the court he spotted the garden hoe at the scene before police arrived, and returned the tool to its normal spot nearby. Upon police's request, he later retrieved the hoe, which he said he was unaware was covered in blood.

“The garden hoe yielded no DNA traces and no fingerprints, according to police,” said the defendants’ lawyer, Nakhon Chompuchat. “But we think there should be something left.”

\
Nakhon Chompuchat (L) and Andy Hall (R) speaking to reporters outside the court on 9 July 2015.

The defense has requested the remaining evidence be re-tested by the Central Forensic Institute, an agency administered by the Ministry of Justice.

"We want an independent agency to retest [the evidence]," said Nakhon, the lawyer representing the accused. "Not the police, because the police are intent on sending the suspects to jail. And their method is neither consistent nor transparent. Only two people were present for the entire process: a police officer and a police doctor. There were no  photographs of the process, either. When we mentioned this in the court, they quipped that we have been watching too much CSI."

An officer at the police station that oversees Koh Tao said he was unable to comment because he has been strictly ordered by his superiors not to speak on the record while the trial is ongoing.

Hush-hush local coverage 

In addition to the “used up” evidence, suspicions about police’s case against the Burmese men have been fanned by a lack attention from the Thai press.

“I wonder if there's any attempt by Thai media to cover-up the trial, because there's been so little news reports about it,” Nakhon told Khaosod English.

Some foreign reporters commented on the lack of a Thai media presence at last week's court hearings, which Hall said was only attended by 2-3 Thai journalists, compared to 15-20 reporters from foreign news outlets.

“In the beginning of this case I had the Thai media calling me 24 hours a day,” said Hall. “[Since the trial] I have not had one Thai media language person contact me. Not one. I am shocked.”

Most of Thailand’s mainstream newspapers have provided scant coverage of the court hearings, solely relying on quotes provided by police officers.

Reporters have also been barred from taking notes during the trial, which has led to further confusion. According to Hall, court officials said they decided to prohibit note-taking in order to ensure that the media did not take and report “inaccurate” notes.

“The justification doesn’t make much sense to me,” he said, adding that the Thailand's criminal justice system is critically weakened by the lack of verbatim records of court proceedings.

The prosecution’s second round of witness examinations is scheduled to start on 22 July, with a verdict expected in October. 

Relatives of Miller and Witheridge flew back to the UK this weekend after attending the first court session, while the mothers’ of the two Burmese defendants are seeking to secure visas to attend the trial next week. 

 

Timeline of the Koh Tao murder investigation (click to expand)

 

CORRECTION: The beach cleaner who removed the garden hoe from the crime scene did not tell the court he also washed the tool, as was originally reported.

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Six Dead After Six Bombings in Southern Thailand

A soldier provides security as villagers offer food to Buddhist monks in Pattani, southern Thailand, 08 March 2011. Image: EPA

BANGKOK (DPA) — Six people died and 13 more were injured in a string of bomb attacks overnight in Thailand's southern provinces, officials said Saturday.

The bombings – one in Songkhla province, four in Narathiwat province and one in Yala province – targeted banks, restaurants and hotels. 

"Three people died from injuries relating to the blasts and three more from a fire that started because of a bomb," Banphot Poonpien, a spokesman for the army's Internal Security Operation Command, told dpa by phone.

Thailand's three Muslim-majority southern provinces have been embroiled in an insurgency since 2004 against the central government in Bangkok. Thailand is predominantly a Buddhist nation.

More than 5,000 people been killed in the ongoing conflict.

(Reporting by Cod Satrusayang)

 

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Top Democrat Accuses 'Former Communists' of Backing 14 Anti-Junta Activists

Rangsiman Rome and other activists facing trial in military court held a press conference vowing to continue their fight for democracy, 9 July 2015.

BANGKOK — A prominent Democrat Party politician has alleged that a group of former Communist insurgents are pulling the strings behind the fourteen anti-junta activists who are facing trial in military court.

Bhumisan Seneewong na Ayutthaya, chairman of the party's strategic committee for northeastern Thailand, said today that although the fourteen activists have "good intentions," the Democrat Party has received information that they are being backed by former leftist and communist fighters who fought in the northeast during the 1970s. 

According to Bhumisan, these ex-leftists also served as advisers to former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, the de facto leader of the Redshirt movement who was ousted by the military in 2006 and has been living in self-imposed exile since 2008 to avoid a corruption conviction. 

"Today, Thaksin is now a convict on the run, but these former leftists are still trying to establish the regime that they like, by using the same old trick of exploiting young people – those who are innocent and not – as their instruments," Bhumisan said at a press conference at the Democrat Party's headquarters in Bangkok.

The fourteen activists, eleven of whom are university students, are facing up to seven years in prison on charges of violating the military government's ban on protests and inciting unrest with their peaceful campaign against the junta, which seized power from a pro-Thaksin government in May 2014.

Leading members of the military junta have accused the activists of being puppets of "politicians," yet they have not provided any evidence or identified anyone by name. 

Bhumisan asserted that the information he gave to the press today was confirmed by former communist insurgents who have become "defenders of the monarchy" in recent decades. 

"They lamented to me that those people [the pro-Thaksin former leftists] have lost their ideology to the vicious capitalist regime, yet they still exploit the proletariat class as instruments in their game," Bhumisan told reporters. "They also told me, today there is no communist left in Thailand, only [corruption]. Therefore, I would like to ask young people who truly have democracy in their hearts to exercise their judgement and wisdom to understand what the real world really is like, and who has been continuously harming our homeland." 

Known for its conservative, pro-establishment stance, Thailand's Democrat Party has acted as a major figure behind the successive campaigns against Thaksin and his political allies in the past decade. However, the party has not won a single national election since 1992. 

Yesterday, the fourteen activists held a press conference and vowed to continue their effort to revive democracy and civil rights in Thailand.

"I insist that we will continue our campaign as students, activists, and people who believe in democracy," said Rangsiman Rome, a law student at Thammasat University. "We hereby announce that we are willing to cooperate with all organizations whose stances are in favor of democracy, human rights, justice, public participation, and non-violence." 

Rangsiman added, "Government officials keep saying that we have been hired or are backed by politicians or connected to foreign organizations, but they have no evidence. I would like to ask, who are these organizations? What evidence do you have? The coup regime has been attempting to smear us in order to build legitimacy to use of violence against us, like what the students experienced on 6 October 1976." 

Rangsiman was referring the October 6 massacre, when at least 46 people were killed after security forces and right-wing militants stormed the site at Thammasat University where several thousand left-leaning students were holding a peaceful rally. The massacre was described by authorities at the time as an operation to clear Communist insurgents from the university.  

 

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Redshirt Behind Prayuth 'Cash Transfer' Rumor Linked to Anti-Monarchy Cell

Rinda Parichabutr, 45, at a police press conference in Bangkok on 10 July 2015.

BANGKOK — Police say a 45-year-old woman arrested for spreading a libelous rumor about junta chairman Prayuth Chan-ocha is connected to an anti-monarchy network.

Thai police announced the arrest of Rinda Parichabutr, 45, at the police headquarters in Bangkok today. Police say she is a supporter of the Redshirt movement, which backed the government toppled by Gen. Prayuth in a coup d'etat last May. 

She now faces up to twelve years in prison after being charged with violating Computer Crime Act, inciting unrest, and causing panic among the public. 

According to Thai police chief Pol.Gen. Somyot Pumpanmuang, Rinda wrote on her Facebook on 6 July that Gen. Prayuth transferred 10 billion baht to an offshore bank account in Singapore. Gen. Prayuth, who also serves as Prime Minister, has denied the allegation.

"Mrs. Rinda admitted to us that she wasn't fully aware of consequences [of her postings]," Pol.Gen. Somyot said at the press conference. "I would like to warn people to be careful when they post or send messages that are potentially illegal, and I want them to consider that the rights and freedom of others should not be violated. If the action breaks any laws, officials will strictly take action."

Citing police’s investigation, Pol.Gen. Somyot also asserted that Rinda has a "connection" to the overseas anti-monarchy network headed by Manoon Chaichana, aka 'Anek San Francisco,' a Redshirt activist believed to be residing in the United States. Manoon is wanted by Thai police for violating Section 112 of the Thai Criminal Codes, which outlaws criticism of the monarchy and carries up to 15 years in prison.  

"She has connection to the network of Mr. Anek San Fran[cisco], the suspect who violated Section 112 and who is still on the run," Pol.Gen. Somyot said. 

At the press conference, Rinda said she posted the message after someone texted in to her through the chat application LINE, and insisted that she had no intention to damage the country.

"I think that, as a citizen, I have the rights to criticize and express my opinion, since the Prime Minister is a public figure," Rinda said. "But I concede that my words affect other people. So I'd like to warn other people who use social media to be careful, because this is a sensitive issue." 

Last month, a 49-year-old woman was arrested for allegedly spreading a rumor about a counter-coup in Thailand. She was charged with violating the Computer Crime Act and insulting the monarchy, and is now facing trial in military court. Police said she also has ties to Anek, who police have accused of backing the "terrorist network" behind an abortive plan to stage bomb attacks in five different locations around Bangkok earlier this year. 

Since staging the coup against the Redshirt-backed government in May 2014, Gen. Prayuth has kept a tight lid on freedom of expression in the name of restoring peace and order. Wielding near-unlimited powers granted to him by the interim constitution, the junta chairman has banned protests, sent anti-junta dissidents to stand trial in martial court, and repeatedly asked media agencies to refrain from criticizing his military regime. 

 

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