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Thailand: Next government must ensure urgent human rights reforms

Thailand’s next government must lift undue restrictions on freedom of expression and limit arbitrary executive powers, Amnesty International has said, ahead of polling day on Sunday (24 March).

Over the last 10 years of political instability, the Thai authorities have often invoked national security to silence perceived critics and peaceful political opponents.

Amnesty is now putting forward a Human Rights Agenda which outlines nine top human rights issues that parliamentary candidates, and those elected to the next government, must prioritise.

These include the rights to freedom from torture and enforced disappearance, freedom of expression, freedom of assembly and association, and the right to privacy in the design of cybersecurity measures.

After the Royal Thai Army took power in a May 2014 coup and declared martial law, the military authorities heavily restricted the exercise of basic human rights. The Army pledged that the sweeping rights restrictions they had enacted were temporary measures to preserve peace and order, and that democratic elections were on the horizon.

Yet they have repeatedly delayed both the lifting of rights restrictions and the holding of elections.

Katherine Gerson, Amnesty International’s Thailand campaigner, said:

“The new administration should end the criminalisation of peaceful dissent and other arbitrary limitations on freedom of expression.

“The Thai authorities have also arbitrarily employed emergency powers to get around human rights safeguards.

“The next government must respect human rights even in emergencies. It will need to strengthen legal protections to prevent the serious human rights violations that have flourished under military rule and in the absence of accountability.

“This election takes place after more than four years in which freedom of expression has been systematically repressed. The use of judicial powers to silence dissent severely undermines trust in the country’s legal institutions.”

The current election date of 24 March 2019 has been validated by the Election Commission and appears likely to go ahead.

Amnesty’s Human Rights Agenda also calls for establishing stronger protections for refugees and people seeking asylum, and abolishing the death penalty.

Katherine Gerson said:

“The recent cases of Rahaf Mohammed and Hakeem Ali al-Araibi captivated millions of people around the world. Their ordeals starkly illustrate the risk to refugees of forcible return to places where they face huge danger.

“The Thai government should act on its past commitments to improve the protection of refugees. With this election, the government should commit to codifying its respect for refugees into law.”

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