Pravit Rojanaphruk | |
|---|---|
ประวิตร โรจนพฤกษ์ | |
| Education | |
| Occupation | Journalist |
| Organization | Khaosod English |
Pravit Rojanaphruk (Thai:ประวิตร โรจนพฤกษ์;RTGS: Prawit Rochanaphruek) (born 1967) is a Thai journalist who works as a senior staff writer forKhaosod English ('fresh news').[1] He formerly wrote a regular column forThe Nation, an English-language newspaper inThailand, but was pressured to resign due to his political opinions following the2014 coup d'état.[2] Before the military coup, he was a prominent champion ofdemocracy and free expression and was consequently investigated several times. Immediately after the coup, he was arrested on a charge of lèse majesté and detained for a week. Since the coup, he has been critical of the ruling junta and its efforts to limit freedom.[3][4][5][6] Pravit has been detained for "attitude adjustment" twice by theruling junta and as of 2017, hassedition charges against him for Facebook posts he made earlier that year.[7]
Andrew MacGregor Marshall, a former Reuters correspondent, described Pravit in the British newspaperThe Independent as "one of the country's best correspondents".[8] In recognition of his critical reporting, Rojanaphruk was awarded the prestigiousInternational Press Freedom Award by theCommittee to Protect Journalists in 2017.[9]
Pravit was born into a Thai-Chinese family inBangkok in 1967. The son of a diplomat, he spent several years of his childhood inBrussels andManila. He received a bachelor's degree in community development from theUniversity of the Philippines[10] and a master's degree in social anthropology fromUniversity of Oxford. His master's thesis was entitled,Tourist and Cultural Authenticity: Anthropological Reflection on the Notion of Cultural Authenticity in Tourism.[11][12]
After working briefly in business, he began writing forThe Nation in 1991. As of 1996, he was working as assistant feature editor ofThe Nation.[10]
After the 22 May 2014 military coup, Pravit and a fellow journalist, Thanapol Eawsakul, were summoned by the military on 23 May 2014. Before answering the summons, Pravit told the Thai media, "I hope people will not give up the spirit and thatGeneral Prayut will be the last dictator of Thailand". He was said to have added: "They can detain me, but can never detain my conscience". He thereupon taped his mouth shut and put his hands over his ears. On the following day he went with a lawyer and representatives of theUN to the headquarters of theNational Council for Peace and Order (NCPO). He was questioned for five hours without his lawyer being present and was then taken to an unidentified detention center.[13]
TheForeign Correspondents' Club (FCCT) of Thailand issued a statement expressing its deep concern about the detention of Pravit and Eawsakul, noting that freedom of expression and the right for journalists to work without fear of arrest or harm are core principles of the FCCT. The FCCT urged the new military government to end the detainment of journalists and lift restrictions on the media.[14]
Pravit later explained that he had been detained for a week at a military camp outside Bangkok. He reportedly told the commander that he did not bear any resentment towards him or his men, but on the contrary, explained he was an ardent supporter of democracy and freedom.[15] Upon his release, he later explained, Pravit was forced to sign a conditional agreement in which he promised he would not aid, join, lead, or have any involvement with any anti-junta movement.[16]
Pravit was "detained" by the military for the second time from 13 to 15 September 2015. Pravit's first military detention was in May 2014, two days after the coup d'état, when the junta's National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO) detained him at an army base in Ratchaburi Province for a week. In the second interrogation, after about an hour of questioning, Pravit was taken to an army base where he was asked about his political stance, his affiliations with political groups, and human rights organizations, and his reasons for disagreeing with Article 112, the lèse majesté law. During his interrogation, Pravit found that the military officials were concerned with social media. "They were paranoid about tweets, not even published news inThe Nation". After being interrogated at the army base from 15:30-21:00, Pravit was transported in a van for a little over an hour to another location. During the ride, Pravit was blindfolded, so he did not know where he was taken. "Although I wasn't tortured,...I was severely intimidated and infringed upon", said Pravit.[17]
On 15 September 2015, Pravit resigned fromThe Nation under pressure from the newspaper due to his political opinions. He said he agreed to quit because he "considered the newspaper to be like his own home, which he didn't wish to destroy". Pravit had been detained on 13 September by soldiers and held incommunicado until 15 September for what the military called "attitude adjustment". He had been an outspoken critic, in newspaper columns and on Twitter, of the junta that has ruled since a military coup ousted a civilian government. It was the second time Pravit was detained by the junta, which summoned large numbers of politicians and potential dissidents in the months after the coup, and resumed a crackdown on dissent. The junta says criticism could destabilize the nation, which it says needs unity after almost a decade of sometimes violent political conflict.[18][19]
On 8 August 2017, thePolice Technology Crime Suppression Division charged Pravit withsedition and computer crimes for posting comments on hisFacebook page criticizing military rule and theNational Council for Peace and Order (NCPO) junta's slow response to flooding innortheastern provinces. Sedition in Thailand carries up to a seven year sentence. Thailand's "Computer-Related Crime Act" enables authorities to restrict online speech, spy on users, and censor. The government regards internet criticism of the NCPO as "distorted" and "false", an offense under article 14 of the law. According to theCommittee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) the charges carry a sentence of seven to twenty years in prison.[20][failed verification][21][22][23] The CPJ sent a follow-up letter to the prime minister in September 2019 asking him to fully restore press freedoms and, in particular, to drop sedition charges against Pravit. This happened after the junta was replaced by an elected government.[24]
His 1996 bookWishes and Lies is a collection of articles fromThe Nation, originally published between 1992 and 1995.[10]