
Thai prosecutors rejected the accusation against the American academic accused of insulting the country’s monarchy after his arrest criticized the US and threw the shadow above the tariff interviews.
The prosecutors abolished the royal insults and fees for computer crime against Paul Chambers, the lecturer at the University of Northern PHITSANULOK, and inform the police of the decision until the objection. There were no clear reasons in the decision statement.
The chambers that have been living in Thailand for more than 30 years have been charged with a regional army unit of violating the royal insult or forest Majeste, a law on comments on the powers of the Prime Minister and the Blurb monarchy, which supported the international webinar last October. Chambers denied a fee.
The case is considered to be related to the delay of interviews between Thailand and the US to reduce the trump management plan on the slap of 36% of the tariff on the export of Southeast Asia.
The interviews initially scheduled at the end of April were postponed after Washington asked Bangkok to deal with a set of “questions” about trade, government officials said. The extent of these questions was clarified by Thai officials and no new date should be held.
In its statement, the US Foreign Ministry stated in its statement on April 8 that its arrest was concerned and the case strengthened its long -term concern about the use of the Les Majeste forest in Thailand. The deadline concerns Article 112 of the Thai Criminal Code, which punishes anyone who “defrises, offends or threatens” the Thai king, queen, heir or regent up to 15 years in prison.
Chambers, an expert in Thai armed forces, was released from preliminary detention on bail days after being arrested. The bail conditions included a ban on overseas travel without the court’s permission and the seizure of its passport. He was also obliged to wear an electronic monitoring device around the ankle.
This article was generated from an automated news agency without text modifications.
(Tagstotranslate) Thai prosecutors