Thailand | PM cautions news media on lese majeste law

Thailand’s prime minister warned yesterday that the BBC could be prosecuted if an online report published by its Thai-
language service about the country’s new king is found to have violated the law safeguarding the monarchy’s reputation.

BBC-Thai, a relative newcomer among the services of the British Broadcasting Corp., caused a stir when it published a profile of King Maha Vajiralongkorn Bodindradebayavarangkun touching on controversial aspects of his background. The story included details of three of his marriages that ended in divorce and other material that cannot be published by Thai news media without legal risk.

Thailand has a strict lese majeste law against insulting the monarchy that carries a penalty of three to 15 years in prison. No charges have been filed against the BBC yet.

Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-
ocha said that because “a news agency has a branch in Thailand staffed with Thai reporters, if they violate Thai laws, they have to be prosecuted. Just like when we go to other countries and violate their laws, we are also prosecuted.”

In the days after the story was published on Friday — one day after Vajiralongkorn ascended the throne — the BBC’s office in Thailand received multiple visits from the army and police. The BBC shut the office this week, but continues to broadcast and publish on its website and on Facebook, although some readers said they found the link to the article about Vajiralongkorn now blocked in Thailand.

BBC said in a statement that its Thai-language service “was established to bring impartial, independent, and accurate news to a country where the media faces restrictions, and we are confident that this article adheres to the BBC’s editorial principles.”

The article sparked outrage among some Thai royalists, with social media groups vigorously criticizing the BBC. The Facebook group “V for Thailand” posted the BBC’s Bangkok phone number on its Facebook page, encouraging its followers to call and harass people who work at the news service.

Thai police arrested a student on Saturday for sharing a link to the BBC article on Facebook, releasing him on bail the next day. It was the first arrest under the lese majeste law since Vajiralongkorn became king. MDT/AP

Categories Asia-Pacific