Facebook blocked access within Thailand to a group with one million members that has criticised the country’s king, but said it was likely a legal challenge to the government’s demand that it block the group.
The move comes amid near daily youth-led protests against the government headed by the former military junta chief and unprecedented calls for reforms of the monarchy.
The “Royalist Marketplace” group was made in April by Pavin Chachavalpongpun, a self-exiled academic and critic of the monarchy.
On Monday night, the group’s page brought a message, “Access to this group has been restricted within Thailand pursuant to a legal request from the Ministry of Digital Economy and Society.
Pavin, who lives in Japan, said Facebook had defected to the military-dominated government’s pressure.
Our group is part of a democratisation process, it is a space for freedom of expression”, Pavin told journalists at our partner news agency Reuters.
“By doing this, Facebook is cooperating with the authoritarian regime to obstruct democracy and cultivating authoritarianism in Thailand.”
Pavin’s new group of the same name already had over 455,000 members on Tuesday.
Facebook said on Tuesday it had been planning to legally challenge the Thai government after being compelled to block entry to the group.
“Requests like this are severe, contravene international human rights law, and have a chilling effect on people’s ability to express themselves,” a Facebook spokesperson said.
“We work to protect and defend the rights of all internet users and are preparing to legally challenge this request.”
Thailand’s lese majeste laws, which forbid defaming the king, with penalties of up to 15 years in prison, is often the basis for these requests to block or remove content on social media platforms.
Earlier this month, Thailand’s digital minister accused Facebook of not complying with requests to restrict content, including insults to the monarchy.
On Aug. 10, he gave Facebook 15 days to comply with court take-down orders or face charges under the local Computer Crime Act, which carries a fine of up to 200,000 baht (approximately $6,367.40) and an additional 5,000 baht (approximately $159.18) daily until every order is observed.
Digital ministry spokesman Putchapong Nodthaisong stated on Monday that Facebook cooperated before the deadline since it knew the context of Thai society.
Putchapong didn’t remark on Facebook’s strategy for legal action when requested by journalists on Tuesday.
The ministry last week filed a separate cybercrime complaint against Pavin for making the group.
The team at Platform Executive hope you have enjoyed the article. Initial reporting via our content partners at Thomson Reuters. Reporting by Patpicha Tanakasempipat. Editing by William Maclean and Ed Davies.
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