Saturday, April 20, 2024
27 C
Brunei Town

Thai protester accused of mocking queen gets two years’ prison

BANGKOK (AP) – A court in Thailand yesterday sentenced an activist to two years in prison for allegedly insulting the country’s queen by wearing traditional Thai attire at a demonstration for reform of the monarchy two years ago, a legal aid group said.

Jatuporn ‘New’ Saeoueng wore a pink dress while a fellow protester held an umbrella over her as she walked down a red carpet at a mock fashion show held in the street in downtown Bangkok on October 29, 2020.

The rally was billed as a counterpoint to a fashion show being held by Princess Sirivannavari Nariratana, a daughter of King Maha Vajiralongkorn.

Vajiralongkorn’s wife, Queen Suthida, dresses in elegant silk fashions for formal and public occasions. Members of the royal family have attendants often holding ceremonial umbrellas over them on such occasions.

The group Thai Lawyers for Human Rights said Bangkok’s Criminal Court initially sentenced Jatuporn to three years’ imprisonment for violating the lese majeste law – which makes defaming the monarch or his immediate family punishable by a prison term of three to 15 years per offence – and the Public Safety Act.

Pro-democracy protesters perform on a mock ‘red carpet’ fashion show billed as a sort of counterpoint to a fashion show being held by one of the monarchy’s princesses nearby in Bangkok. PHOTO: AP

She was also fined THB1,000 (USD27.50). The sentence was immediately reduced to two years.

Jatuporn was sent to the Central Women’s Correctional Institution pending another court’s ruling on her request to be freed on bail. The protest was one in a series in 2020-2021 that originally demanded political changes, including new elections and a more democratic constitution, but expanded to call for reform of the monarchy.

Protesters charged that King Vajiralongkorn wields an inordinate amount of power in what is nominally a democracy under a constitutional monarchy.

The monarchy has long been considered an untouchable institution, revered by a large part of the population.

The protest movement later lost momentum due to controls imposed to fight the coronavirus pandemic and a government legal offence against protest leaders.

According to Thai Lawyers for Human Rights, since November 2020 there have been 210 people charged with a total of 229 violations of the lese majeste law. Thirteen cases have come to trial, and charges were dismissed in three of them.

“I have no intention to mock anyone. I dressed for myself on that day, for a version of myself in a Thai traditional dress,” Jatuporn said in an interview posted online.

“And today, I dress the same way to show that this is just me, in a Thai traditional dress and to ask – what’s wrong with that?”

Jatuporn, who faces six more charges related to her protest activities, said she would appeal her case all the way up to the Supreme Court if necessary.

spot_img

Latest

spot_img