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CASE N° TH/183 - JATUPORN PROMPAN | 
	 
 
Resolution adopted unanimously by the IPU Governing Council at its 192nd session 
(Quito, 27 March 2013)
 
The Governing Council of the Inter-Parliamentary Union,
Referring to the case of Mr. Jatuporn Prompan,  a former member of the House of Representatives of Thailand, and to the resolution it adopted at its 191st session  (October 2012),
 
Taking into account the information provided by the Secretary  General of the House of Representatives in his letter of 15 February 2013 and  by the source on 23 March 2013,
 
Recalling the following:
 
- Jatuporn,  a leader of the United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship (UDD) and at  the time a member of the House of Representatives, played a prominent role in  the “Red Shirt” demonstrations that took place in central Bangkok between  12 March and 19 May 2010; in the weeks following the demonstrations,  Mr. Jatuporn and his fellow UDD leaders were officially charged with  participating in an illegal gathering that contravened the state of emergency  declared by the government and with terrorism in relation to arson attacks on  several buildings that took place on 19 May 2010, when the UDD leaders had  already been taken into police custody; Mr. Jatuporn was quickly released  on bail thereafter;
  - On  10 April 2011, Mr. Jatuporn took the stage during the commemoration  organized at the Democracy Monument in Bangkok to mark the first anniversary of  the government’s response to the Red Shirt demonstrations; in his speech, he  criticized the then government and the Royal Thai Army for using the pretext of  “protecting the monarchy” to criminalize the Red Shirt movement and kill its  members the year before; Mr. Jatuporn also criticized the Constitutional  Court for sparing the Democrat Party from dissolution, making reference to  leaked video recordings that showed some of the justices colluding with party  officials; following this, representatives of the Royal Thai Army filed a  complaint alleging that Mr. Jatuporn had committed lese-majesty in his  speech; the Department of Special Investigations (DSI) asked the Criminal Court  to revoke his bail following the complaint, which it did on 12 May 2011;  Mr. Jatuporn was subsequently held in Bangkok Remand Prison until  2 August 2011; the DSI subsequently dismissed the charge and the case was  referred to the Office of the Attorney General for consideration on 17 January  2012;
  - A  week after the revocation of his bail, Mr. Jatuporn’s name was included on the  party list submitted by Pheu Thai for the legislative elections to be held on  3 July 2011; the Election Commission endorsed the list after verifying  that the candidates met the required legal conditions; in advance of the  elections, Mr. Jatuporn’s lawyers repeatedly filed motions requesting that  the Criminal Court grant bail or temporary release to allow him to vote; the  requests were denied and Mr. Jatuporn was thereby prevented from  exercising his right to vote; according to the source, his failure to cast a  vote was immediately seized upon by the opposition as evidence that he was not  qualified to sit in parliament; at first, the Election Commission certified the  election results, allowing Mr. Jatuporn to be sworn in as a member of the  new House of Representatives, which first met on the day of his release; in  late November 2011, however, the Election Commission ruled by a 4-1 vote that  Mr. Jatuporn should be disqualified as a member of parliament and asked  the Speaker of the House of Representatives to refer the case to the  Constitutional Court for a final ruling;
  - On  18 May 2012, the Constitutional Court ruled that Mr. Jatuporn’s  detention on election day, and consequent failure to vote in the election,  disqualified him from serving as a member of parliament; it  reasoned that Mr. Jatuporn was prohibited from voting under Article 100(3)  of the 2007 Constitution, which specifies that “being detained by a warrant of  the Court or by a lawful order” on election day was one of the prohibitions  leading to disenfranchisement, and that this in turn meant that he had  automatically lost his membership of his political party under the 2007 Organic  Act on Political Parties; the loss of party membership was the basis (under  Articles 101(3) and 106(4) of the Constitution) on which he was disqualified  from sitting in the House of Representatives,
  
Recalling that the source affirms that  the charges against Mr. Jatuporn are entirely inapposite, that the  specific charge of participation in an illegal gathering stemmed from the  previous government’s unlawful use of emergency powers, and that the terrorism  charges on which Mr. Jatuporn and other Red Shirt leaders were indicted in  August 2010 are politically motivated, but that, while the Red Shirts were  accused by the government of committing various acts of violence, there exists  no evidence that their leaders played a role in planning the attacks, or even  knew about them; considering that hearings will be held twice a week in the  criminal case between 19 April and July 2013,
Recalling further that Mr. Jatuporn was sentenced on 10 July and  27 September 2012 respectively in two criminal cases to two six-month  prison sentences (with a two-year suspension) and fines of 50,000 baht on  charges of defaming then Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, but that an appeal  is pending in both cases; bearing in mind that the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of  the right to freedom of opinion and expression repeated in his report  (A/HRC/17/27 of 16 May 2011) the call for all States to decriminalize  defamation,
 
Bearing in mind that Thailand is a party to the International Covenant on Civil and  Political Rights and therefore obliged to protect the rights enshrined therein, 
 
Considering that, on 1 April 2013, the House of Representatives  will start debating changes to the Constitution that are expected to affect  inter alia the legal framework governing political parties and their  dissolution; recalling that the  source fears that Mr. Jatuporn’s disqualification may be used by his  party’s opponents to argue that the governing Pheu Thai party “inappropriately  endorsed” Mr. Jatuporn’s candidacy, and that Mr. Jatuporn’s inclusion  on the party’s slate of candidates therefore caused the election to be  conducted in a “dishonest and unfair manner” and that his party therefore  should be dissolved,
 
- Thanks the Secretary General of the House of Representatives for his letter and cooperation;
  - Reaffirms its view that the letter does  not dispel its concerns that Mr. Jatuporn was disqualified on grounds that  appear directly to contravene Thailand’s international human rights  obligations;
  - Considers that, although the Thai Constitution specifically  provides for the disenfranchisement of persons “detained by a lawful order” on  election day, preventing those accused of a crime from exercising the right to  vote is at odds with the provisions of the International Covenant on Civil and  Political Rights, Article 25 of which guarantees the right to “take part in the  conduct of public affairs” and “to vote and to be elected at genuine periodic  elections” without “unreasonable restrictions”;
  - Considers in this regard that denying an incumbent member of parliament temporary release  from prison to exercise the right to vote is an “unreasonable restriction”,  particularly in the light of the Covenant’s provisions guaranteeing persons  accused of a crime the right to be presumed innocent (Article 14) and “separate  treatment appropriate to their status as unconvicted persons” (Article  10(2)(a)); points out that Mr. Jatuporn’s disqualification also  appears to run counter to the spirit of Article 102(4) of the Thai  Constitution, which stipulates that only those convicted, not those accused, of  a crime lose their right to stand for election once a candidacy has been  submitted;
  - Remains likewise concerned that  Mr. Jatuporn’s political party membership was terminated at a time when it  had not been established that he had committed any wrongdoing and on account of  a speech that appeared to fall within the exercise of his right to freedom of  expression; remains also concerned that  the courts can rule on the question of party membership when this is first and  foremost a private matter between Mr. Jatuporn and his party and there was  no dispute between them on the question;
  - Sincerely hopes that, in the light of  the above, the competent Thai authorities will do everything possible to  reconsider Mr. Jatuporn’s disqualification and ensure that all current  legal provisions are in line with the relevant international human rights  standards; wishes to be kept informed  of the consequences of the constitutional amendment process in this regard;
  - Remains concerned about the alleged  legal basis for and facts adduced to substantiate the charges pending against  Mr. Jatuporn and about the possibility that the court may order his return  to preventive detention; wishes to  receive a copy of the charge sheet; considers that, in the light of the concerns in the case, it would be useful to send  a trial observer to the proceedings, and requests the Secretary General to make the necessary arrangements;
  - Remains concerned that Mr. Jatuporn was  prosecuted, sentenced and convicted on charges of defamation; concurs in this regard with the  recommendation made by the United Nations Special Rapporteur that defamation  should not be considered an offence under criminal law; wishes to ascertain, therefore, whether the Thai authorities are  contemplating reviewing the existing legislation with this in mind; wishes to receive a copy of the  first-instance rulings and to be kept informed of the appeal proceedings;
  - Considers that the present case has  ramifications that go well beyond the situation of Mr. Jatuporn alone and  concerns the constitutional and institutional relationship between the House of  Representatives and the courts; requests the Secretary General to visit Thailand with a view to raising this matter with  the competent parliamentary, executive and judicial authorities and exploring  the possibility of IPU assistance in this area;
  - Requests the  Secretary General to convey this resolution to the competent authorities and to  the source;
  - Requests the Committee to continue  examining this case and to report back to it in due course. 
  
 
 
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