Supinya.com
Freedom of expression and belief is a basic human right, not a crime.-
May 12th, 2009Articles from CPJ, Cyber-liberty, Freedom of expression&press freedomCommittee to Protect Journalists released this special report on 10 worst countries to be a blogger , Thairat online picked the piece and publish it online in Thai today.
CPJ names the worst online oppressors. Booming online cultures in many Asian and Middle Eastern nations have led to aggressive government repression. Burma leads the dishonor roll.
Tags: Internet, Liberty, NetizenNew York, April 30, 2009—With a military government that severely restricts Internet access and imprisons people for years for posting critical material, Burma is the worst place in the world to be a blogger, the Committee to Protect Journalists says in a new report. CPJ’s “10 Worst Countries to be a Blogger” also identifies a number of countries in the Middle East and Asia where Internet penetration has blossomed and government repression has grown in response.
“Bloggers are at the vanguard of the information revolution and their numbers are expanding rapidly,” said CPJ Executive Director Joel Simon. “But governments are quickly learning how to turn technology against bloggers by censoring and filtering the Internet, restricting online access and mining personal data. When all else fails, the authorities simply jail a few bloggers to intimidate the rest of the online community into silence or self-censorship.”
คณะกรรมการปกป้องสื่อมวลชน จัดอันดับประเทศที่เข้าข่ายคุกคามและ ละเมิดสิทธิ์ของบรรดา blogger มากที่สุด
นาย โจแอล ไซมอน ผู้บริหารระดับสูงขององค์กรปกป้องสื่อมวลชนรายงานผ่านเว็บไซต์ของหน่วยงาน ว่า บล็อกเกอร์ถือเป็นกลุ่มผู้นำความคิดในสังคม ดังนั้นรัฐบาลในประเทศต่างๆจึงพยายามที่จะควบคุม และกลั่นกรองข้อมูลข่าวสารที่บล็อกเกอร์นำมาเผยแพร่ทางเว็บไซต์ ด้วยการบล็อกข้อมูลของบางเว็บ หรือห้ามไม่ให้ผู้ใช้เข้าไปดูข้อมูลในเว็บได้ ทั้งนี้หากเครื่องมือที่รัฐบาลนำมาใช้ไม่ได้ผล รัฐบาลก็จะหันมาใช้อำนาจในการจับกุมบล็อกเกอร์เข้าคุก เพื่อเป็นการเชือดไก่ให้ลิงดู ทำให้้บล็อกเกอร์คนอื่นๆเกรงกลัวและหยุดการเคลื่อนไหญ่
อ่านต่อใน http://www.thairath.co.th/content/life/4425
While FACT comments that for the first time,Thailand has appeared in the list of top five countries imposing Internet censorship on their citizens. This is due to the fact that Herdict reporting software is being used intensively to provide accurate monitoring. Presumably, FACTsite is somewhere on that list! It should give Thai govt with all its pretensions of democracy to fall into an elite censorship club, just behind Iran, China, Moldova, and the United States (for reasons of copyright protection).]
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May 8th, 2009Articles from CPJ, Freedom of expression&press freedom, Media&journalism, PoliticsThe article about the media and political conflict in Thailand written on CPJ’s blog By Shawn W. Crispin/Southeast Asia Representative
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The media have become part and parcel of Thailand’s intensifying political conflict: Two privately held satellite television news stations are openly aligned with competing political street movements, and state-controlled outlets are under opposition fire for allegedly misrepresenting recent crucial news events.
As the conflict escalates and the government reverts to crude censorship and veiled threats, all kinds of journalists here are bracing for what they fear could be an assault on their ability to neutrally gather and present the news, and a blow to press freedom.
http://cpj.org/blog/2009/04/media-caught-in-the-middle-of-thai-conflict.php
Tags: Democracy, Journalism, Liberty -
February 24th, 2009Articles from CPJ
Thanks to Shawn W.Crispin and Committee to Protect Journalists(CPJ) for this article. It’s always a fruitful discussion talking with Shawn and unbelievably I’ve learned a lot about Thai politics and the enigmas of this country from him. I would like to welcome his new blog on CPJ’s website as well.
The picture above, we, Thai Netizen Network, submitted an open letter to Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva on Jan 13th, 2009. We still have to follow up the plan on having a dialogue with the authorities on Internet freedom in order to uphold basic level of cyber-liberty and civil rights .
It is not easy at all but we’re trying.
Read some stories I told Shawn from this article below.
(Thanks Sunit, ChangeFusion for this picture)
……..Fighting back against Thai censorship
By Shawn W. Crispin/Southeast Asia Representative
Thailand’s Internet–once open and free–is fast morphing into one of Asia’s more censored cyberspaces. But a new group of concerned Thai citizens, known as the Thai Netizen Network (TNN), is bidding to turn back the tide of government censorship through advocacy and monitoring.
Web sites that have posted materials deemed potentially offensive to the Thai royal family have been blocked by successive military-appointed and democratically elected Thai governments. And the campaign of censorship is accelerating under new Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva.
The monarchy has been caught in the middle of Thailand’s grinding political conflict, with competing camps hurling allegations of disloyalty against one another. To assert its pro-crown credentials, the Ministry of Information and Communication Technology announced in January that it had blocked more than 2,300 Web sites for posting anti-monarchy materials. The Justice Ministry meanwhile said last week that it aims to block an additional 3,000-4,000 sites on the same grounds.
Beginning last year, a group of academics, activists, journalists and webmasters held informal meetings to discuss the emerging threat to Internet freedom in the wake of the passage of the 2007 Cyber Crime Act and the intensified use of lese majeste charges against journalists, commentators, and everyday Internet users. Both laws give Thai officials the authority to censor news and opinions that could be deemed a threat to national security or the monarchy.
TNN coalesced into a formal organization soon after several local Web sites, including news and commentary outlets Prachathai and Fah Diew Kan, were threatened with closure last year by officials for posting materials offensive to the monarchy. Fah Diew Kan’s site was eventually blocked in January after officials threatened the site’s ISP administrator.
TNN coordinator Supinya Klangnarong told CPJ that the new group’s main missions are to keep Thailand’s Internet open and free, to monitor government surveillance and censorship, and to provide moral and legal support to Internet users and writers who encounter harassment for their postings.
Currently, TNN is publicizing the case and arranging legal representation for Suwicha Thakor, an oil-rig engineer who was arrested and held without bail on January 14 for posting materials onto the Internet considered offensive to the monarchy. They have also taken up the case of BBC correspondent Jonathan Head, who faces three different lese majeste complaints filed by a senior Thai police official.
“We are trying to establish a channel with the police to reduce tension and frustration,” said Supinya from her back alley Bangkok office. “Finally they will need to talk to the public and give a clearer definition of what exactly constitutes lese majeste. We hope to help find that middle ground.”
The group has already notched some advocacy successes. On January 13, TNN members met with the prime minister to voice their concerns about the Ministry of Information and Communication Technology’s recent move to establish an 80 million baht (US$2.29 million) “war room” tasked with monitoring and censoring the Internet.
During TNN’s meeting with the prime minister, the group’s core members proposed and Abhisit agreed to the establishment of a working group to discuss Internet freedom issues and the need to balance free expression with upholding the monarchy.
“He said he understood our concerns, but that we needed to understand he is under pressure from many groups to protect the country and monarchy,” Supinya said, recounting the meeting. “We’re still waiting to hear back from him.”
(Reporting from Bangkok)
http://cpj.org/blog/2009/02/fighting-back-against-thai-censorship.php
Tags: Liberty, Netizen, supinya

Supinya is her given name. Freebird is a pen name.
She is liberal but moderate in a way.
A new blogger currently working for Thai Netizen Network and Campaign for Popular Media Reform (CPMR) based in Bangkok, Thailand.
Supinya is an Ashoka and Eisenhower Fellow.
Her favorite maxim is quoted from Prince Gautama Siddharta, the Buddha: "Peace comes from within.
Do not seek it without"