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<p>Military officers paid a visit to an anti-establishment red shirt man in northern Thailand, asking his opinions on Thailand’s new draft constitution.</p> <p>According to the&nbsp;<a href="https://tlhr2014.wordpress.com/2015/08/30/siriwat_phayao/">Thai Lawyers for Human Rights (TLHR)</a>, four military officers in plainclothes on Saturday afternoon, 29 August 2015, came to have a discussion with Siriwat Jupamadta, a coordinator of United Front for Democracy Against Dictatorship (UDD), a red shirt group, at his office in the northern province of Phayao.</p>
<p>The police have prevented a local conservation group from showing a documentary film on controversial petroleum concessions in the region, saying it might breach the Copyright Act. &nbsp;</p>
<p>More than 100 academics and activists throughout the country have issued a joint statement in support of an embattled lecturer in Isan, Thailand’s Northeast, who has received threats and online bullying after expressing her disapproval over hazing rituals.</p>
<p>A mother is suing the Thai Ministry of Defence and the Royal Thai Army over the death of her son, who was allegedly tortured by army officers shortly before his death. &nbsp; &nbsp;</p> <p>According the Cross Cultural Foundation (CrCf), a CSO promoting human rights and cultural diversity, on Wednesday morning, 26 August 2015, the Civil Court of Bangkok, Ratchadaphisek Road, heard testimony from plaintiff witnesses in the case of the alleged torture of Somchai Si-ueangdoi.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Villagers from the southern Thailand currently facing an eviction order from the Thai authorities asked National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) to investigate how the eviction order was reached. &nbsp;</p>
By Thaweeporn Kummetha |
<div>MARA Patani, the umbrella organization for the insurgency movement in the restive three southernmost provinces of Thailand -- Pattani, Yala, and Narathiwat, and four districts of Sonkhla -- has just had their first meeting with media. </div>
<p dir="ltr">The Thai military in Isan, Thailand Northeast, prevented an environmental youth camp in an area with an ongoing mine conflict in Loei Province from taking place, saying that the event might affect national security.</p>
<p>Prosecutors in Isan in Thailand’s Northeast, have postponed an indictment of a lese majeste case involving a well known anti-establishment redshirt figure, Sombat Boonngamanong, aka. Nuling.</p> <p>On Wednesday, 26 August 2015, the prosecutor’s office of the northeastern province of Roi-Et, postponed the indictment of Sombat Boonngamanong, the leader of Red Sunday, &nbsp;red shirt. Sombat is accused of offenses under Article 112 of the Criminal Crime Code, the lese majeste law, and Article 14 of the Computer Crime Code, which forbids importing illegal online contents.</p>
<p>Thai military prosecutors have charged an anti-establishment red shirt single mother with sedition and computer crime offences for posting false rumours about the junta leader. &nbsp;</p>
<p>More than 100 Thai websites have been attacked by a self-proclaimed Tunisian electronic jihadist group.</p> <p>According to the latest report of the&nbsp;<a href="https://www.thaicert.or.th/about-en.html">Thai Computer Emergency Response Team (ThaiCERT)</a>, an agency which monitors online threats in the Electronic Transactions Development Agency (ETDA) of the Ministry of Information and Communication Technology (MICT), 106 Thai websites have been attacked by the Fallaga Group since May 2015.</p> <p>The group claims to be electronic jihadists from Tunisia.</p>
<p>A provincial court in central Thailand has detained a teenager who posted a picture of a westerner with a message about bomb attacks.</p> <p>On Tuesday, 25 August 2015, the Provincial Court of Suphan Buri Province in central Thailand granted the police permission to detain Thanaton Thongsopha, aka Mos, a 19-year-old vocational student, who is accused of posting information about a bomb attack in Suphan Buri province and the picture of a westerner bombing suspect on Facebook and Line, an online chat application.</p>
<p>Military personnel visited the office f an anti-establishment social-political journal, asking the editor his opinions towards the Thai junta. &nbsp;</p> <p>Five officers from the 5th Anti-aircraft Infantry at 1:45 pm on Tuesday, 25 August 2015, came to the office of Same Sky Journal (Fah Diew Kan in Thai).</p> <p>The officers said that they came to introduce themselves to people working at the publication because they have taken over the responsibility to do so in place of those who used to be in charge of the same task.</p>
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