Thailand: Chairperson of the Justice for Peace Network detained
Event- Country
- Thailand
- Initial Date
- Apr 24, 2015
- Event Description
On 2 May 2015, the detention of human rights defender Mr Muhammad Yaki Salae was extended by emergency decree. The human rights defender was originally arrested on 24 April 2015. He faces up to 30 days in confinement. Muhammad Yaki Salae is the Chairperson of the Justice for Peace Network (JOP), founded in 2006 as a network of human rights and peace activists aiming to strengthen non-violent efforts to protect human rights, promote access to justice, and end impunity in Thailand. The JOP engages in human rights monitoring and advocacy while supporting victims of human rights violations in their fight for justice. Their work is focuses on the empowerment of local communities in the far south of Thailand, to aid them in their struggle for the realisation of their human rights. The extension of Muhammad Yaki Salae's detention was ordered under emergency decree, according to which his detention may be extended for a maximum 30 days. The order came following the human rights defender's seventh day in detention, the maximum length of time a suspect may be held for interrogation under Thai Martial Law. Muhammad Yaki Salae was arrested on 24 April 2015 at the Muang Yala Police Station, and brought to the Ingkhayuth Boriham Army Camp in Tambon Bor Thong, Nongchik District, Pattani, where he currently remains detained. The authorities falsely claimed his involvement in the bomb attack in the city of Yala in March 2012. The human rights defender was present at the police station at the request of authorities, and arrived there with the intention of displaying his innocence and cooperating fully with the police. Risks faced by human rights defenders working in southern Thailand have grown over recent years. State forces act with impunity in the ongoing military operation targeting the muslim population in the Pattani, Narathiwat, and Yala provinces, where human rights violations, including extrajudicial killings, are common. Front Line Defenders expresses its serious concern at the ongoing detention of Muhammad Yaki Salae, which it believes to be a direct attempt to force an end to his peaceful human rights work in southern Thailand. UPDATE 7 May 2015 On the evening of 7 May 2015, human rights defender Mr Muhammad Yaki Salae was released from detention following the refusal of Yala Provincial Court to permit an extension of his time in confinement. Muhammad Yaki Salae is the Chairperson of the Justice for Peace Network (JOP), founded in 2006 as a network of human rights and peace activists aiming to strengthen non-violent efforts to protect human rights, promote access to justice, and end impunity in Thailand. The JOP engages in human rights monitoring and advocacy while supporting victims of human rights violations in their fight for justice. Their work is focuses on the empowerment of local communities in the far south of Thailand, to aid them in their struggle for the realisation of their human rights. Muhammad Yaki Salae was released from the Ingkhayuth Boriham Army Camp in Tambon Bor Thong, Nongchik District, Pattani on the evening of 7 May 2015. His release had been ordered by the Yala Provincial Court earlier on the same day, in line with its rejection of an application made by the police investigator for the extension of Muhammad Yaki Salae's detention. The Court ruled that no individual should be detained without clear charge against him or her, and called on law enforcement officers to exercise their duties in full respect of the law and human rights principles, as provided in Announcement No. 98/2014 of the Thai National Peace and Order Maintaining Council. According to this reasoning, the detention of Muhammad Yaki Salae was arbitrary, as police could not provide any charges against him. Muhammad Yaki Salae's detention for interrogation had been extended on 2 May 2015 by an emergency decree permitting suspects to be held in detention for up to 30 days, subsequent to the expiry of the 7 day period allowed under Martial Law. Front Line Defenders welcomes the release of Muhammad Yaki Salae and the decision of Yala Provincial Court in support of human rights principles, but reiterates its concern at the growth of arbitrary detention as a tool for the harassment of human rights defenders in Thailand.
- Impact of Event
- 1
- Violation
- (Arbitrary) Arrest and Detention
- Intimidation and Threats
- Rights Concerned
- Right to liberty and security
- Source
- Monitoring Status
- Pending
- Event Location
Latitude: 6.801624
Longitude: 101.1519275
- Event Location
- Summary for Publications
On 2 May 2015, the detention of Mr. Muhammad Yaki Salae, Chairperson of the Justice for Peace Network (JOP), was extended by an emergency decree permitting suspects to be held in detention for up to 30 days, subsequent to the expiry of the 7 day period allowed under Martial Law. Mr. Salae was arrested on 24 April 2015. UPDATE: On 7 May 2015, Mr. Salae was released from detention following the refusal of Yala Provincial Court to permit an extension of his time in confinement. The Court ruled that no individual should be detained without clear charge against him or her, and called on law enforcement officers to exercise their duties in full respect of the law and human rights principles, as provided in Announcement No. 98/2014 of the Thai National Peace and Order Maintaining Council. According to this reasoning, the detention of Muhammad Yaki Salae was arbitrary, as police could not provide any charges against him.