AFP award recognises Thai journalist for recording lese-majeste cases
The prize honours journalists working in difficult conditions in Asia
HONG KONG:
Thai journalist Mutita Chuachang has won the 2015 Agence France-Presse Kate Webb Prize for her powerful and persistent reporting of royal defamation cases that have multiplied under the country's military rulers.
The prize honours journalists working in difficult conditions in Asia, and is named after a crusading AFP reporter who died in 2007 at the age of 64 after a career covering wars and other historic events.
Mutita, 33, was recognised for her dogged efforts to record cases of alleged lese majeste for the online newspaper Prachatai, which publishes in Thai and English.
In Thailand anyone found guilty of defaming the king, queen, heir or regent faces up to 15 years in jail on each count -- and both the number of prosecutions and the length of sentences have surged under the military.
Cases are often cloaked in secrecy with many defendants tried in military courts -- without the right to appeal -- since the arch-royalist Thai junta seized power in 2014.
The offence also carries widespread social opprobrium in the sharply hierarchical society where reverence to the monarchy -- led by 87-year old King Bhumibol Adulyadej -- is a given.
As a result, many Thai journalists and media outlets prefer to avoid the associated risks of reporting.
But Mutita refuses to allow cases to go unnoticed or unrecorded, pestering the courts for trial dates and documents to give publicity to cases that are otherwise easily buried.
She has followed cases including students performing an allegedly anti-monarchist play to a man accused of daubing defamatory graffiti in a toilet.
"She has been on the front line in the fight for freedom of expression in Thailand by persistently reporting on lese-majeste cases," said Andrea Giorgetta of the International Federation of Human Rights (FIDH).
Mutita's articles, which do not carry a byline, are a key source of information and data on lese-majeste sentences and convictions, said Human Rights Watch, hailing the "valuable work" done by the reporter.
In her reporting she strives to speak to those convicted and tell their stories.
And as punishments get increasingly severe -- in August, a man was sentenced to 30 years and a mother of two young children got 28 years in prison for posting alleged defamatory messages online -- her work gets harder.
The law, known by a shorthand of "112" from the relevant section of the criminal code, "is an issue that Thai society and media do not want to report on," Mutita told AFP.
A graduate of Thammasat University in Bangkok, which has a strong pro-democracy tradition, Mutita has been raising awareness of the bizarre nature of the trials: she often cannot even repeat the alleged offence without risking falling foul of the law herself.
With new restrictions imposed on prison visits by the military, Mutita cannot visit detainees as she did previously, to hear "their stories from their own mouth."
Kate Webb, after whom the prize is named, was one of AFP's finest correspondents. She earned a reputation as a fearless reporter but was equally known for her kindness and compassion and became a mentor to young Asian journalists.
Thai journalist Mutita Chuachang has won the 2015 Agence France-Presse Kate Webb Prize for her powerful and persistent reporting of royal defamation cases that have multiplied under the country's military rulers.
The prize honours journalists working in difficult conditions in Asia, and is named after a crusading AFP reporter who died in 2007 at the age of 64 after a career covering wars and other historic events.
Mutita, 33, was recognised for her dogged efforts to record cases of alleged lese majeste for the online newspaper Prachatai, which publishes in Thai and English.
In Thailand anyone found guilty of defaming the king, queen, heir or regent faces up to 15 years in jail on each count -- and both the number of prosecutions and the length of sentences have surged under the military.
Cases are often cloaked in secrecy with many defendants tried in military courts -- without the right to appeal -- since the arch-royalist Thai junta seized power in 2014.
The offence also carries widespread social opprobrium in the sharply hierarchical society where reverence to the monarchy -- led by 87-year old King Bhumibol Adulyadej -- is a given.
As a result, many Thai journalists and media outlets prefer to avoid the associated risks of reporting.
But Mutita refuses to allow cases to go unnoticed or unrecorded, pestering the courts for trial dates and documents to give publicity to cases that are otherwise easily buried.
She has followed cases including students performing an allegedly anti-monarchist play to a man accused of daubing defamatory graffiti in a toilet.
"She has been on the front line in the fight for freedom of expression in Thailand by persistently reporting on lese-majeste cases," said Andrea Giorgetta of the International Federation of Human Rights (FIDH).
Mutita's articles, which do not carry a byline, are a key source of information and data on lese-majeste sentences and convictions, said Human Rights Watch, hailing the "valuable work" done by the reporter.
In her reporting she strives to speak to those convicted and tell their stories.
And as punishments get increasingly severe -- in August, a man was sentenced to 30 years and a mother of two young children got 28 years in prison for posting alleged defamatory messages online -- her work gets harder.
The law, known by a shorthand of "112" from the relevant section of the criminal code, "is an issue that Thai society and media do not want to report on," Mutita told AFP.
A graduate of Thammasat University in Bangkok, which has a strong pro-democracy tradition, Mutita has been raising awareness of the bizarre nature of the trials: she often cannot even repeat the alleged offence without risking falling foul of the law herself.
With new restrictions imposed on prison visits by the military, Mutita cannot visit detainees as she did previously, to hear "their stories from their own mouth."
Kate Webb, after whom the prize is named, was one of AFP's finest correspondents. She earned a reputation as a fearless reporter but was equally known for her kindness and compassion and became a mentor to young Asian journalists.