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Thai protest leaders go on trial for sedition, royal insults  

WION Web Team
Bangkok   Updated: Mar 15, 2021, 09:09 PM IST
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Photograph:(AFP)

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The 22 demonstrators deny charges of committing sedition and a litany of other offences, which includes lese majeste in section 112 of the Thai criminal code, a crime punishable by up to 15 years in prison for each count

A mass trial began in Thailand on Monday for activists accused of sedition and insulting the powerful monarchy at a major protest last year, one of a series of mass demonstrations against the country's military-backed establishment.  

The 22 demonstrators deny charges of committing sedition and a litany of other offences, which includes lese majeste in section 112 of the Thai criminal code, a crime punishable by up to 15 years in prison for each count.  

"They can lock me up but they cannot lock up the truth," protest leader Parit 'Penguin' Chiwarak shouted as he arrived in a prison truck, defiantly flashing the three-finger 'Hunger Games' salute synonymous with the youth movement.  

"The truth is always the truth whether in prison, under torture or awaiting execution, the truth is the truth," said Parit, 22, who is among seven defendants held in pre-trial detention accused of sedition and insulting King Maha Vajiralongkorn during two protests in September.  

Parit later announced he would go on hunger strike until he and his friends were granted bail.  

How long the trial will last is not known and the judge adjourned proceedings until March 29, defence lawyer Krisadang Nutcharat said.  

The court could not be reached for comment but during earlier indictment processes it has denied multiple bail requests for the seven on the grounds that could re-offend by holding more protests.  

Thailand's youth movement has posed the biggest challenge so far to prime minister and former coup leader Prayuth Chan-ocha, who they say engineered a process that would preserve the political status quo and keep him in power after a 2019 election. Prayuth has rejected that.  

Protesters also broke a traditional taboo by demanding reform of the monarchy, saying the constitution drafted by the military after the 2014 coup gives the king too much power.  

(With inputs from agencies)