Two journalists charged with defaming Thai navy

The Thai authorities have charged two journalists with defaming the country's navy in a news report about the trafficking of refugees from Burma, amid concerns about press freedom in the country.

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Phuketwan, an English-language news website, posted a story last July containing excerpts from a Reuters report alleging that members of the Thai military were involved in trafficking captured immigrants from Burma's beleaguered Rohingya ethnic minority.

The charges against Alan Morison, the website's Australian editor, and his Thai colleague, Chutima Sidasathien, were laid several days after Reuters won a Pulitzer prize for its series on the violent persecution of the Rohingya – a Muslim minority that rights groups say has been subjected to systematic abuse and forced segregation.

The journalists appeared in a court on the southern island of Phuket to hear charges of defamation and violation of the 2007 Computer Crime Act. If found guilty, they could face up to seven years in prison and a fine of 100,000 baht (£1,790).

"To us, it's still very much a case that shouldn't be going to court, and sadly it's going to damage Thailand's reputation as a democracy because these kinds of cases shouldn't occur in any democracy," Morison told Associated Press.

The navy brought the case against the pair in December. Human rights and press freedom groups have criticised the navy and called for the charges to be dropped.

The trial of Phuketwan's journalists is "unjustified and constitutes a dark stain on Thailand's record for respecting media freedom," Brad Adams, the Asia director of New York-based Human Right Watch, said in an email.

"The Thai navy should have debated these journalists publicly if they had concerns with the story rather than insisting on their prosecution under the draconian Computer Crimes Act and criminal libel statutes."

Both defendants were released on 100,000 baht bail.

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