BANGKOK: -- Four Thai men were charged over an anti-coup protest
in a military court in Bangkok Monday, activists said, as dozens of
students rallied outside in defiance of martial law in the junta-ruled
nation.
Around 40 students chanted slogans in support of the accused outside the
court in the capital's historic heart to protest against the use of
military courts to try civilians.
Thailand has seen a rapid erosion of civil liberties since the army
seized power last May with the army banning political gatherings of more
than five people, censoring the media and arresting and detaining
opponents of junta rule.
The four men, including one student, were each charged with breaching
the ban on gatherings during a peaceful demonstration in Bangkok last
month, said Anon Nampa, one of the accused who also works for the Thai
Lawyers for Human Rights.
They face up to one year in jail and a 20,000 baht ($600) fine if convicted, he added.
"We have each been charged under the law against the gathering of more
than five people -- now we have been released," said Anon. The four must
next report to the court on 27 March.
Pro-democracy student activists rallied outside the court to support the
accused after mobilising at Bangkok's liberal Thammasat University,
holding placards saying "Civilians must not be tried in a military
court" and "No more dictatorship in Thailand".
"This is harming our human rights. We don't want people to be tried in a
military court," economics student Sukrid Peansuwan, 21, told AFP at
the campus rally.
A university lecturer who did not want to be named said she was
supporting the students as "Thailand has come too far to go back to
tyranny".
"Seeking democracy and justice is not a crime," she told AFP.
The four anti-coup protesters were arrested, and later released on bail,
after a Valentine's Day protest in central Bangkok where activists
handed out roses and copies of George Orwell's anti-authoritarian novel
"1984".
Amnesty International condemned the charges in a statement released Monday, saying they should never have been levelled.
"They should not be placed in front of a military court, where they will
not face a fair trial, and they should be permitted to freely express
their opinions and protest peacefully," said Rupert Abbott, Amnesty's
Research Director for Southeast Asia and the Pacific.
May's military coup was the latest twist in Thailand's decade-long
political crisis, which broadly pits a Bangkok-based middle class and
royalist elite -- backed by parts of the military and judiciary --
against urban working-class voters and farmers from the country's north.
The junta says it will hold fresh elections in early 2016 once reforms
to tackle corruption and curb the power of political parties are
codified in a new constitution.
But the draft charter has already raised deep concerns in the kingdom
and critics doubt whether it will bridge Thailand's deep political
divisions.
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