A
Thai woman accused of insulting the country’s late king has been forced to
kneel before his portrait outside a police station on the island of Koh Samui
as hundreds of people demanded an apology.
The
woman’s arrest and public shaming on Sunday was the latest of several such
incidents since King Bhumibol Adulyadej died last week after a 70-year
reign,plunging Thailand into intense mourning.
Two
police officers led 43-year-old Umaporn Sarasat to a picture of Bhumibol in
front of Bophut police station on the tourist island, where she knelt and
prayed, both on the way into the station and the way out.
The
crowd, some of whom held aloft portraits of the revered monarch, jeered when
she first appeared. A line of police officers linked arms to keep them from
surging forward.
It
is likely that Sarasat, a small business owner, who is alleged to have posted
disrespectful comments online, will face charges of insulting the monarchy.
“We
are going to proceed with the case as best we can,” the district police chief,
Thewes Pleumsud, told the crowd. “I understand your feelings. You came here out
of loyalty to His Majesty. Don’t worry, I give you my word.”
Authorities
were urging calm after people posted comments on social media about those not
wearing black and white clothing to mourn the revered monarch, with some
arch-royalists reprimanding people in public. A government spokesman said some
Thais could not afford mourning clothes and urged tolerance.
There
have been reports of profiteering as demand for mourning clothes has soared
since Bhumibol’s death on Thursday.
Tens
of thousands of Thais have descended on the Grand Palace in Bangkok where
Bhumibol’s body is being kept, and the government has declared a year of
mourning.
Several
foreign governments have warned citizens travelling in Thailand to avoid
behaviour that could be interpreted as festive, disrespectful or disorderly. On
Friday, police and soldiers on the Thai resort island of Phuket dispersed a mob
seekingto confront a man they believed had insulted the king.
Video
footage showed the crowd blocking the road outside a soy milk shop and waving
placards with slogans such as “buffalo”, a slang word for stupidity.
Thailand
has draconian lèse-majesté laws that impose stiff prison sentences for actions
or writings regarded as derogatory toward the monarch or his family.
The
operator of Thailand’s main cable TV network has blocked foreign news
broadcasts deemed insensitive to the monarchy since Bhumibol’s death.
Source: TheGuardian
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