guardian.co.uk,
Kate Hodal in Bangkok, Monday 30 January 2012
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| Yingluck Shinawatra, the Thai prime minister, has vowed to protect the monarchy over the internet. Photograph: Jean-Christophe Bott/EPA |
Thailand
has become the first government to publicly endorse Twitter's controversial
decision to censor messages in certain countries.
Twitter
announced last week it would permit country-specific censorship of content thatcould violate local laws, prompting debate worldwide over freedom of speech.
In
Thailand, where censorship laws are already heavily enforced, the information
and communication technology minister, Jeerawan Boonperm, called Twitter's
decision a "welcome development" and said the ministry already
received "good co-operation" from internet companies such as Google
and Facebook.
The Thai
government would soon be contacting Twitter to "discuss ways in which they
can collaborate", she told the Bangkok Post.
In China,
the state-run Global Times also endorsed the new rules in an article on Monday:
"It is impossible to have boundless freedom, even on the internet and even
in countries that make freedom their main selling point," it said.
Twitter is
blocked in China, but many users access the site by accessing external
networks.
According
to the regulations, a tweet from Thailand could be blocked at the request of an
individual, a company, or the government. However, while it will be invisible
to users in Thailand, the tweet can still be seen by users in other countries.
Thailand
has some of the toughest censorship laws in the world, ranking it 153 out of
178 in Reporters Without Borders' 2011 Press Freedom Index. Thailand's
lese-majeste regulations inhibit defamatory, insulting or threatening comments
about the royal family, which are punishable by up to 15 years in prison, but
under Thailand's 2007 computer crimes act prosecutors have been able to
increase sentences.
Last year,
a 61-year-old Thai national was jailed for 20 years for sending defamatory text
messages about the monarchy, while a Thai-US citizen received a two-and-a-half
year prison sentence for translating a banned biography of the king.
While the
information ministry has blocked thousands of websites in recent years – mostly
related to online gambling, pornography and lese-majeste cases – Monday's
endorsement comes at a time of heightened tension over censorship rules.
A
lese-majeste monitoring centre was opened in December and is manned 24 hours a
day by staff trawling the net for offensive material. Facebook users already
face potential jail time if they click "like" or "share" on
any sites deemed offensive to the monarchy, while anyone sending a link,
forwarding or revisiting websites with lese-majeste content also need beware,
authorities have said.
Despite
open and repeated calls for relaxed censorship laws, Yingluck Shinawatra last
week said the monarchy should be respected and vowed to "protect the
institution, not exploit it".
Thailand's
endorsement on Monday could have profound ramifications across the region, said
Sunai Phasuk of Human Rights Watch Thailand, while it already "adds more
damage to an already worrying trend in Thailand".
"Twitter
gives space to different opinions and views, and that is so important in a restricted
society – it gives people a chance to speak up," he said. "But if
this censorship is welcomed by Thailand, then other countries, with worse
records for human rights and freedom of speech, will find that they have an
ally."
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