Attn:
Gen.
Prayuth Chan-ocha
Head
of the National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO)
Government
House
Pitsanulok
Road,
Dusit,
Bangkok 10300, Thailand
Gen.
Somyot Pumpanmuang
Royal
Thai Police Commissioner-General
Royal
Thai Police
Floor
7, Building 1, Rama 1 Road,
Pathumwan,
Bangkok 10330, Thailand
Chief
of Judge Advocate General
The
Judge Advocate General’s Office
Government
Building
Royal
Thai Armed Forces Headquarters, Building 4, Chaeng Wattana Road,
Lak
Si, Bangkok 10210, Thailand +66 2 575 6327
Subject:
Drop all charges against 16 human rights defenders
Dear
General Chan-ocha, General Pumpanmuang and Chief of Judge Advocate General,
We, the
undersigned human rights organisations, write to you regarding the charges
against 16 student and allied activists (7 from the Dao Din student group based
at Khon Kaen University, and 9 from Bangkok), 14 of whom were detained from 26th
June to 8th July 2015 in Bangkok.
These 16 students have been charged for their role in peaceful public assemblies
on 22 nd May 2015 commemorating
the first-year anniversary of the May 2014 military coup.
The 14 who were detained
for 12 days are facing additional sedition charges, which were used on 26th
June 2015 to arrest them. These 14 students from the Neo-Democracy Movement
were taken to Bangkok Military Court around midnight on 26th
June 2015, when the Military Court granted the Royal Thai Police’s request for
pre-trial detention ro a 12 day period. The 14 students are being held in the
Bangkok Remand Prison and the Central Women’s Correctional Institution. The
same Bangkok Military Court rejected the Royal Thai
Police’s request to extend the pre-trial detention on 7th
July 2015. The 14 were released 24 hours after the decision on 8th
July 2015, but they are still facing all the charges filed against them.
The 14 who were
detained for 12 days include 7 members of a Khon Kaen-based student group: Mr.
Jatupat Boonpattararaksa, Mr. Apiwat Suntararak, Mr. Payu Boonsopon, Mr.
Panupong Srithananuwat, Mr. Suvicha Tipangkorn, Mr. Supachai Pukrongploy and
Mr. Wassant Saetsit. All were initially arrested on 22nd
May 2015 when they staged a peaceful protest in Khon Kaen against the effects
of military rule on community rights, human rights and the poor in northeast
Thailand. They were granted bail after having been charged by Khon Kaen
Military Court for violating Order No. 3/2558 (3/2015) issued by the ruling
National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO).
Similarly, the 7
Bangkok-based university students and allies – Mr. Rattapol Supasupon, Mr.
Rangsiman Rome, Mr. Songtham Kaewpanpruk, Ms. Chonthicha Jaengraew, Mr. Apisit Sapnapaphan, Mr.
Pakorn Areekul, and Mr. Pornchai Yuanyee – staged a peaceful protest in central
Bangkok on 22nd May 2015, have
been charged with violating NCPO Order 3/2558. The sedition charges for all 14
students, under Section 116 of the Thai Penal
Code, follow the
students’ peaceful demonstrations against your military government in Bangkok
on 24th June and 25th
June 2015.
We condemn the
use and existence of Order 3/2558, because this order invokes all NCPO Orders
issued between 22nd May 2014 and 1st
April 2015, which have effectively suspended all civil and political rights and
fundamental freedoms on unjustifiable grounds of “national security.” Article
116 of the Thai Penal Code is a severe and unacceptable restriction on freedom
of speech which is used to criminalise political activists.
Order 3/2558, issued by
virtue of Article 44 of the Interim Constitution 2557 B.E., gives sweeping
powers and provides blanket immunity to your military government. It allows the
militarization of all law- enforcement and state operations. For example, this
Order enables the continued use of military courts and military personnel to
carry out measures under the Criminal Procedure Code. Furthermore, officials
exercising duties under this Order enjoy full immunity from both disciplinary
and criminal justice procedures.
The use of military
courts to try civilians is a blatant violation of international fair trial rights,
as guaranteed by Article 14 of the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights (ICCPR), which Thailand ratified in 1996, and is
legally bound to implement. Article 14, Paragraph 1, enshrines the
principle of trials being conducted by a “competent, independent and impartial
tribunal.” This principle is violated by the use of military courts to try
civilians; especially when the military controls all branches of state power,
including the executive, legislative, and now, judicial branches. Article 14,
Paragraph 5, explicitly guarantees the right to judicial review of any
conviction and sentence by a higher court, which is a right denied to anyone
tried in a military court in Thailand.
Furthermore, we
decry the harassment and intimidation of the students and allies’ groups. The
ICCPR imposes legally-binding obligations on State Parties to respect a number
of human rights and fundamental freedoms, including freedom of expression
(Article 19) and the right to peaceful assembly (Article 21).
We also call your
attention to Article 17 of the ICCPR which guarantees the right to protection
from “arbitrary or unlawful interference with his privacy, family, home or
correspondence, [and] to unlawful attacks on his honour and reputation.” State
authorities stand in direct violation of this right as they have carried out a
constant campaign of intimidation and harassment of the students’ affinity
groups. Uniformed officials (both police and military) have been photographing
the students’ parents houses; authorities have been questioning parents on the
upbringing of their children; Khon Kaen University has been pressured to call
all the students’ parents in for a meeting where authorities lectured the
parents on 11th June 2015; and soldiers, police and other authorities have been
threatening repercussions if community-based Human Rights Defenders associate
with the Dao Din student group again.
Finally, your
Orders as head of the NCPO violate the rights and freedoms guaranteed by
international human rights law, which continues to apply to Thailand under the
Interim Constitution. Most directly, Article 25 of the ICCPR enshrines the
right to participate in public affairs for people. The suspension of elections,
community rights, community participation in environmental and natural resource
management policy are all violations of Article 25. The absolute power you
hold, as per Article 44 of the Interim Constitution, effectively guts this
right.
The students and
allies’ commemorative activities on the 22nd
May 2015 and their pro-democracy demonstrations on 24th
June and 25 th June 2015,
expressed their opposition to these systematic and institutional violations of
basic human rights and fundamental freedoms.
It must be
underlined that Article 19 of the ICCPR also guarantees the right to hold any
opinion and express it by any media. Thus, students have throughout all their
activities been peacefully exercising their own human rights and fundamental
freedoms to decry your military government’s violations of the Thai people’s
human rights. The legal persecution of these students and allies, and the
authorities’ harassment of the students’ affinity groups are direct breaches of
international human rights law. If these charges are pressed on against
students and allies and the military court declares them guilty, they would be
political prisoners of your repressive regime.
These
civic-minded students and allies, and all community-based Human Rights
Defenders they work with, deserve recognition, not criminalisation. Socially-conscious
individuals, especially youth, who engage in peaceful actions to promote human
rights are essential to an open and democratic society and contribute to social
justice.
Therefore,
we urge you to:
1. Immediately and
unconditionally drop all charges and end all legal proceedings against the 16
students and allies;
2. Immediately stop the
harassment of the students and allies’ lawyers by authorities;
3.
Stop all harassment and
intimidation of the students and allies’ affinity groups, including the students’
family members, fellow students, friendship groups, community-based support
groups, citizen journalists, and academics;
4. Immediately revoke all
NCPO Orders and Article 44 of the Interim Constitution and promptly return all
executive and legislative branches of state power to democratically elected
civilians.
Signed:
- ALIRAN (Malaysia)
- Article 19
- Arus Pelangi (Indonesia)
- ASEAN Parliamentarians for Human Rights (APHR, ASEAN)
- ASEAN Youth Forum (ASEAN)
- Association of Human Rights Defenders and Promoters (Burma/Myanmar)
- Arakan Observer Group (Arakan, Burma)
- All Arakan Students' and Youths' Congress (AASYC, Arakan, Burma)
- Australian Burmese Rohingya Association (ABRA, Australia)
- Australia Asia Worker Links (Australia)
- Australian Unions (ACTU, Australia)
- Cambodian Human Rights and Development (ADHOC, Cambodia)
- Centre for Development Resources (CENFORD, Vietnam)
- Cross-Cultural Foundation (Thailand)
- Committee for Asian Women and Persatuan Sahabat Wanita Selangor (Malaysia)
- De Nieuwe Universiteit (The Netherlands)
- Focus on the Global South
- Globalization Monitor
- INSTITUT PEREMPUAN ,Women ‘s Institute ( Indonesia )
- Kuala Lumpur & Selangor Chinese Assembly Hall Youth Section (KLSCAHYS, Malaysia)
- Malaysia Support Group for democracy in Thailand (Malaysia)
- Malaysian against Death Penalty & Torture (Malaysia)
- Malaysian Youth and Students' Democratic Movement (DEMA, Malaysia)
- Migrante International
- Myanmar Ethnic Rohingya Human Rights Organization (MERHROM, Malaysia)
- National Fisheries Solidarity Movement (Sri Lanka)
- National Free Trade Union (Sri Lanka)
- North South Initiative
- Socialist Party of Malaysia (Malaysia)
- Southeast Asia Women's Caucus on ASEAN (ASEAN)
- Pax Romana ICMICA Asia
- Pax Romana International Movement of Catholic Students (IMCS) Asia Pacific
- People Like Us Satu Hati (PLUSH, Yogyakarta, Indonesia)
- People’s Empowerment Foundation (Thailand)
- Persatuan Kesedaran Komuniti Selangor (Malaysia)
- Protection International
- Rohingya American Society (RARS, Milwaukee, USA)
- Rohingya Arakanese Refugee Committee (RARC, Malaysia)
- Rohingya Concern International (RCI, New York, USA)
- Rohingya Youth Development Forum (RYDF, Arakan, Burma)
- Think Centre (Singapore)
- Vietnamese Women for Human Rights (Vietnam)
- Worker Hub for Change (Malaysia)
Individual
endorsements
- David Anthony
- David Suber, co-President of the Students Union of the London School of Oriental and African Studies (United Kingdom)
- Jonelle Twum, supporter from Sweden
- K Aingkaran, Attorney-at-Law, supporter from Sri Lanka
- Niza Concepcion, supporter from the Philippines
- Dr. Paiboon Hengsuwan, Lecturer of Department of Women’s Studies, Faculty of
Social
Sciences, Chiang Mai University (Thailand)
- Rahmayana Fitri, Leader of Youth Development at The Leader and Peace activist in Aceh (Indonesia)
- Dr. Ronald McCoy, Malaysian Physicians for Social Responsibility (Malaysia)
- Shruti Upadhyay
- S.K. Priya, 110 Law Chambers (India)
- William Nicholas Gomes, Human Rights Defender and Freelance Journalist (United Kingdom)
- See earlier post:
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