THE U.S. ambassador to Thailand is under investigation for royal defamation over comments he made criticizing lengthy jail sentences from the kingdom’s lese majeste law, a foreign media group and police said yesterday.
Under Thai law anyone convicted of insulting the king, queen, heir or regent can face up to 15 years in jail on each count.
Prosecutions have surged since the royalist army grabbed power last year, with record breaking sentences handed down in recent months to transgressors.
The Foreign Correspondent’s Club of Thailand (FCCT), which represents international media inside the junta-run kingdom, said it had been asked to cooperate in the probe after U.S. Ambassador Glyn T. Davies delivered a speech there last month.
The body has been asked to assist police “in an official investigation into whether comments made by U.S. Ambassador Glyn Davies at the club Nov. 25 violated article 112 of the criminal code, the lese majeste law,” the club said in a statement.
A senior Thai police source confirmed that they had received a complaint and were investigating the ambassador’s comments.
In a wide-ranging talk to the FCCT, which also heaped praise on the 88-year-old Thai King Bhumibol Adulyadej, Davies expressed concern at long jail terms by military tribunals for alleged lese majeste.
In Thailand, any member of the public can make an allegation of royal defamation and police are duty bound to investigate.
(SD-Agencies)
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