Wife of convicted Thai lèse-majesté activist Somyot in Geneva

published 10-09-2013 09:55, last modified 10-09-2013 09:55
Clean Clothes Campaign (CCC), together with the Free Somyot Campaign and the Thai Labour Campaign, urges the Thai authorities to hear Joop Prueksakasemsuk, Somyot’s wife, who calls to free her husband, labour and human rights defender and magazine editor. Joop Prueksakasemsuk will be in Geneva between 9-13 September, meeting key decision makers.

Somyot is a prisoner of conscience. He was convicted solely for the exercise of his right to freedom of expression and opinion and the right to participate in public life. He has been in detention since April 30, 2011 for the publication of two articles deemed insulting to the monarch. On January 23 2012, the Bangkok Criminal Court found him guilty on 2 counts of Article 112 of the Criminal Code (the lèse-majesté law*) and sentenced him to 11 years of imprisonment.

The verdict undermines the right to freedom of expression and press freedom. It is a violation of international human rights law, in particularly the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), which Thailand has ratified. In August 2012, the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention declared Somyot's detention to be in violation of international human rights law. The EU and the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights have also issued strong statements against the verdict.

Despite the efforts both by his family and the ongoing international campaigns which call for Somyot’ release, Somyot’s 15th bail application has been denied.

Joop Prueksakasemsuk says: “If Thailand is to be in compliance with its binding international legal obligations to respect and protect basic rights, this unjust verdict against Somyot should be promptly overturned on appeal. Additionally, while the appeal is being considered, his constitutional right to provisional release should be upheld so that he could reunite with me, his family. This will also better his medical conditions and at home he can adequately prepare for his defense. Every political prisoner is one too many.”

CCC calls on Thailand to free Somyot and all other persons detained on politically-motivated charges and end all forms of harassment against them to ensure that no one would be criminalised for peacefully exercising their fundamental freedoms, including freedom of expression

*Thailand’s lèse-majesté law prohibits any word or act, which “defames, insults, or threatens the King, the Queen, the Heir-apparent, or the Regent”. This law places the country in contravention of its international legal obligations to uphold international standards of freedom of expression.

Filed under: , ,
See also
Thailand Factsheet February 2015

Thailand Country Report February 2015.pdf

Five years on, international organizations renew their call for the release of Somyot Phrueksakasemsuk Five years on, international organizations renew their call for the release of Somyot Phrueksakasemsuk

On the eve of the five-year anniversary of his detention, we, the undersigned international ...

Free Somyot: 4 years in jail for 'insulting the king' Free Somyot: 4 years in jail for 'insulting the king'

Today it has been four years since Thai editor and labour rights activist Somyot Pruksakaemsuk was ...

Burmese migrant workers' factory announces closure

Over 500 Burmese migrant workers at the Yuan Jiou factory in Mae Sot, Thailand, were fighting to be ...

'Insulting the king': Bail denied

Somyot Pruksakasemsuk's 16th request for bail and temporary release, made in November 2014, has ...

New report to mark International Migrant Day New report to mark International Migrant Day

To mark the United Nation’s International Migrant Day, Clean Clothes Campaign released a new ...

Union leaders finally acquitted

In August 2009 the Bangkok police issued arrest warrants against three union activists for their ...

Sentenced to 11 years in prison

Somyot, a Thai labour rights activist, human rights defender and magazine editor, has been in ...

OECD complaint after forced settlement

In 2011, 22 workers at the Mölnlycke factory were dismissed after the management accused them of ...

more ...