Thailand's navy has filed criminal defamation charges against a news website that published stories alleging Thai military involvement in the trafficking of Myanmar's ethnic Rohingya boatpeople, an editor said.
The English-language Phuketwan site in July posted a story carrying excerpts from a report by the Reuters news agency alleging that members of the Thai military were involved in trafficking captured Rohingya illegal immigrants.
Alan Morison, Phuketwan's editor, told The Associated Press yesterday that he had been summoned along with one of Thai reporters on Wednesday to a police station in Phuket to formally acknowledge the charges.
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"The Thai navy's lawsuit is a reckless attempt to curtail journalists' reporting on alleged human trafficking by its officers," Brad Adams, the group's Asia director said in a statement issued Friday. "The Thai navy should understand that in a democratic society, media scrutiny of the security forces must be possible."
Phuketwan has for several years taken a leading role in reporting on the plight of minority Muslim Rohingya from Myanmar fleeing persecution and poverty to Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia. The journey is a perilous one, and they are often forced back out to sea or detained if they make landfall.
The police charge sheet, a copy of which Phuketwan provided to The AP, alleges that Morison, the Thai reporter and the company owning the website published "false" information defaming the navy.
"We were disappointed that the Royal Thai Navy decided to use a bad law against journalists who are just doing their jobs," Morison said. "It would have been so easy to telephone us or to hold a media conference to set the record straight." "This just makes us keener to know who is mistreating the Rohingya in the secret camps along Thailand's southern border, and how they reach there by sea," he added.