Sentences for those convicted under Section 112 of Thailand’s Criminal Code, or lese majeste law, can be decades long and hundreds of people have been prosecuted in recent years.
A criminal court found him guilty of 14 violations of lese majeste and sentenced him in January 2023 to 28 years.
At least 262 people have been charged with lese majeste during that time, the group added.
Thailand’s lese majeste prosecutions continue despite a civilian government now being in power, following almost a decade of military-backed rule.
The verdicts include a decision by the Constitutional Court on whether Pita sought to overthrow the monarchy through his election campaign to amend the lese majeste law.
Persons:
Mongkol Thirakhot, Chiang Rai, ”, majeste, TLHR, Mongkol, Akarachai Chaimaneekarakate, Akarachai, Anchan Preelert, lese, Arnon Nampa, Arnon, ” TLRH, Thailand’s lese, Pita Limjaroenrat, Pita
Organizations:
CNN, Thai Lawyers for Human Rights, Facebook, Supreme, UN Human Rights, YouTube, Forward, Constitutional
Locations:
Chiang Rai, Thailand, TLHR, Thai