วันศุกร์, ตุลาคม 27, 2560

อัลจาซีร่า ทำสกู๊ปข่าวสั้นๆ เรื่อง 112 มีสัมภาษณ์อาจารย์สุลักษณ์กับคดีหมิ่นกษัตริย์นเรศวร สัมภาษณ์ประวิตร น้องชายประเวศ และ อ.ปวิน - Thailand's lese-majeste law ‘stiffling dissent’




https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xwaZwPigbxA

Thailand's lese-majeste law ‘stiffling dissent’


Al Jazeera English

Published on Oct 24, 2017

Thailand’s former King Bhumibol Adulyadej, the world’s longest-serving monarch, will be cremated on Thursday, over a year after he died. While millions of people are mourning the revered monarch, who ruled for 70 years, Thailand's military government is ramping up its crackdown on people insulting or criticising the royal family. Over the past three years, more than 100 people have been charged or convicted for violating the country’s strict draconian lese-majeste law (injured majesty), which forbids insult of the monarchy. The military leadership says some sort of democracy will return next year, but there is no indication that will mean freedom of speech when it comes to the monarchy. Al Jazeera's Wayne Hay reports from the capital, Bangkok.