Parents of ex-Thai princess jailed for insulting monarchy

BANGKOK - The elderly parents of a former Thai princess were both jailed for two and a half years Wednesday after pleading guilty to defaming the monarchy, an institution protected by one of the world’s toughest lese majeste laws.
Apiruj Suwadee, 72, and his 66-year-old wife Wanthanee are the latest close relatives of fallen former princess Srirasmi to face legal proceedings after a corruption scandal involving her family erupted late last year.
Both had pleaded guilty to insulting the royal family, lodging a malicious claim and asking officials to file false charges against a woman in 2003. “The judge convicted two defendants on insulting the monarchy and sentenced them to five years in prison,” a verdict published by the court stated Wednesday.
“Due to their confession the judge halved the sentence to two years and six months without probation,” it added.
At least eight of Srirasmi’s family have now been convicted and jailed for lese majeste - her elder sister and brother-in-law, two brothers, a nephew and her parents.
Another relative, Pongpat Chayapun, the former head of Thailand’s elite Central Investigation Bureau, was handed a 31-year jail term for a series of convictions linked to an alleged criminal empire that spanned illegal gambling, extortion and kidnapping. He was initially sentenced to six years for lese majeste.
Srirasmi’s siblings were arrested in the wake of that scandal alongside a slew of senior police officers.
But the case against her parents came later and centred on a former neighbour’s complaint that she had been jailed for 18 months on a fraud charge brought maliciously by the Suwadee couple more than a decade ago.
According to the court verdict, the Suwadees made false claims about Crown Prince Maha Vajiralongkorn - who was married to their daughter at the time - in a bid to threaten their neighbour.
Vajiralongkorn divorced Srirasmi and she renounced her royal title following the scandal, which has gripped a public unused to seeing palace intrigue play out in the open.
She and a younger sister have not been arrested but have retreated from public view.
The spectacular demise of the former princess’s family comes at a time of heightened anxiety over the health of the country’s revered but ailing monarch.
Experts say the last decade of political turmoil in Thailand is intertwined with concerns among competing elites over the direction of the kingdom once the reign of 87-year-old King Bhumibol Adulaydej comes to an end.
Bhumibol has largely been confined to a Bangkok hospital in recent months, but he made a rare public appearance on Monday.
Under the royal defamation law - one of the world’s strictest - anyone convicted of insulting the king, queen, heir or regent faces up to 15 years in prison on each count.
But reporting lese majeste cases is fraught with difficulty. Both Thai and international media must heavily self-censor when covering the country’s lese majeste rules. Even repeating details of the charges could mean breaking the law under section 112.

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