![]() |
Ian Graham |
![]() |
Somyot Prueksakasemsuk |
“Union rights are human rights.” That has been said loud and
often. But it bears repeating. Labour rights are specialised extensions of the
principles set out in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. “Everyone has
the right to form and to join trade unions for the protection of his
interests,” the declaration insists. Nobody reading this column is likely to
disagree (except, perhaps, with the “his”). Philosophically, core human rights
such as freedom of association have always underpinned core labour rights.
We seldom hear the equation put the other way round: “Human
rights are union rights”. And yet it is just as true. A place that disregards
any of the basic human rights is a place that trade unions will find irksome.
So what of the other rights in the Universal Declaration?
This one, for instance: “Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and
expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference
and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and
regardless of frontiers” (Article 19). It is surely no less relevant to union
organising. As the ILO’s Karen Curtis told the 4th Assembly for Human Rights in
2006, “the right to express opinions freely, to hold assemblies and public
meetings, to exercise these rights in full freedom and security of person, are
nothing less than the basic civil liberties, without which the exercise of
trade union rights is rendered meaningless”.
And indeed, a current case in Thailand demonstrates the
close links between labour rights, democracy and civil liberties. Supporters
both inside the country and worldwide have been stepping up their action to
free Somyot Pruksakasemsuk. The longtime campaigner for labour rights and
democracy has been in jail since April 2011 on lèse majesté charges. He is
being held purely on remand. To date, the charges against him have not been
proven. In any case, he is not accused of writing the features concerned. He is
charged only with the “publication and dissemination” of two articles in the
journal Voice of Thaksin, of which he was the acting editor but not the
legal publisher. The charge sheet alleges that he thereby “dared to defame,
insult, or threaten His Majesty King Bhumipol Adulyadej of the Kingdom of
Thailand”. The full texts of the two articles are included in the charge sheet,
which is available both in the original Thai and in an unofficial English
translation. Expert witnesses have testified that they do not refer to the
King. Certainly, it would take quite some imagination to find any threats or
insults to the monarchy in what was written.
So why has Somyot been in jail for almost a year? The plain
truth is that he is rather well known to the Thai authorities. Now aged 50, he
joined the Thai labour movement as a teenager. He and other students used the
technique of taking jobs in the country’s burgeoning export industries. There,
they could get to know the young workers who were moving in from the
impoverished rural areas, listen to their concerns, talk to them about trade
unionism, and gather information about pay, safety and discipline in the export
plants. As part of the student movement, Somyot was also active in the 1976
democracy demonstrations in Thailand. And he set up a national campaign for
maternity rights.
In the 1980s, his organising work took a significant new turn
when he founded the Centre for Labor Information Service and Training (CLIST).
This provided much-needed training and advice for local unions in the
industrial zones of the Bangkok region. Its work benefited unions in sectors
ranging from the auto industry to chemicals, garments, diamonds and energy.
CLIST cooperated with both national and international labour confederations,
building up a well-respected network of activists and campaigns. Somyot also
put his organising experience at the service of unions in other newly
industrialising countries.
In 2005, he fulfilled a lifelong ambition when he launched a
left-wing publishing company. Among other things, it produced paperbacks about
the Thai labour movement. As part of the company’s dissemination work, he also
organised a series of public debates and seminars, as well as making use of
online forums and blogs to engage people on issues of Thai politics, labour and
social justice. On the political side, he has been active in the Thai
Democratic Party.
Not surprisingly, his arrest sparked protests both in
Thailand and abroad. Trade unions in a number of countries have held
demonstrations and organised petitions. In November 2011, organisations
including the Clean Clothes Campaign and the Southeast Asian Press Alliance
wrote a joint letter to Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinnawatra, calling for
the charges against Somyot to be dropped or bail to be granted. They also asked
for the Thai lèse majesté law to be reviewed, so as to “ensure its conformity
with Thailand’s international human rights obligations”.
The trial has put Somyot under great physical and
psychological pressure. According to the Thailand Mirror, “he has suffered in
prison, detained with other inmates in a narrow cell crowded with prisoners.
The most comfortable position for him to sleep is to lay down on his side, but
the reality is that the inmates are overlapping when they sleep.” Worse still,
the court has insisted on moving him around from province to province for
prosecution witness hearings, even though all the witnesses are in fact based
in Bangkok. In all, he has been transported for more than 4,000 kilometres in
cages, standing upright in the back of a truck. He is obliged to wear metal
chains weighing more than 10kg. This despite his health problems, which include
hypertension and gout.
So his release on bail has become a priority for his
supporters, who have put up considerable sums as surety. But bail has so far
been refused on eight separate occasions – one of them in February 2012, just
after Somyot’s son Tai went on hunger strike for 112 hours to demand his
father’s release. The length of the fast was a reference to Article 112 of
Thailand’s Criminal Code, which prescribes severe punishment for acts of lèse
majesté. If convicted, Somyot could face up to 15 years’ imprisonment for each
of the two articles published.
“We are deeply concerned about the wellbeing of our
colleague,” stated Jim Boumelha, President of the International Federation of
Journalists (IFJ). “There is simply no reasonable basis to deny him bail so
that he can seek treatment.” The conditions in which Somyot is being detained
have, the IFJ says, added to the outrage at the continuing use of the lèse
majesté law, which “lacks clarity and can be abused to suppress legitimate
dissent in Thailand”. The journalists’ international federation backs the UN
Special Rapporteur on freedom of expression, Frank La Rue, who in October 2011
called for a reform of this law. He noted that “the threat of a long prison
sentence and vagueness of what kinds of expression constitute defamation,
insult, or threat to the monarchy, encourage self-censorship and stifle
important debates on matters of public interest, thus putting in jeopardy the
right to freedom of opinion and expression”.
Indeed, both Thai and foreign journalists have fallen foul
of this law. Last December, US blogger Joe Gordon was jailed for two and a half
years on charges of using the Internet to disseminate information that insulted
the Thai monarchy. In 2009, leading Bangkok-based foreign correspondents were
among those investigated by the police after a lèse majesté complaint was
lodged against the entire Board of the Foreign Correspondents Club of Thailand.
“We believe the case for the reform of this law is now
unanswerable for the survival of press freedom and democratic pluralism in
Thailand,” says Boumelha. “Somyot's detention has laid bare the blatant abuse
of the legislation for political purposes and its repeal is overdue.”
Meanwhile, the campaign to free Somyot continues.
For over 30 years, Somyot Pruksakasemsuk has been a
prominent campaigner for trade union rights and democracy in Thailand. Arrested
on 30 April 2011, he has been held in prison ever since on lèse majesté charges
that have not been proven and which he denies. On 5 April 2012, he stated that
he will refuse to plead guilty in return for a royal pardon. The Free
Somyot campaign is online at http://freesomyot.wordpress.com/ There
is also a special Facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Free-Somyot/122999694453000?ref=ts
Ian Graham is a writer, editor and translator specialising
in labour, social and environmental issues. He was formerly in charge of press
and publications work for the union internationals ICEM and ICFTU.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment