Thailand drops royal insult case against American academic

Catch up with NBC News Clone on today's hot topic: Thailand Drops Royal Insult Case American Academic Rcna209897 - World News | NBC News Clone. Our editorial team reformatted this story for clarity and speed.

Political science lecturer Paul Chambers had been in legal limbo since his arrest on a lese-majeste charge, which led to the loss of his job, his work visa and the seizure of his passport.
U.S. political science lecturer Paul Chambers outside the police station in Phitsanulok, Thailand, where he was arrested on charges of insulting the monarchy.
Political science lecturer Paul Chambers outside the police station in Phitsanulok, Thailand.anonymous / AP

BANGKOK — A royal insult prosecution against an American scholar in Thailand that raised concerns in the U.S. government has been dropped, his lawyer said Thursday, as authorities confirmed the academic had left the country.

Paul Chambers, 58, a political science lecturer, had been in legal limbo since his arrest last month on a lese-majeste charge, which led to the loss of his job, his work visa and the seizure of his passport.

“I am relieved that this situation has been resolved. I have always had great respect for the Thai royal family and anyone who knows me understands that these charges were always based on false allegations by unnamed parties in the military,” Chambers said in a statement issued by Global Reach, a non-profit dedicated to freeing Americans held abroad that worked with his family.

Chambers, who first came to Thailand as a Peace Corps volunteer in 1993, said he was returning to the U.S. but “will maintain my many friendships with the people of Thailand.”

Thailand has one of the world’s harshest lese-majeste laws, setting jail terms of up to 15 years for anyone convicted of defaming, insulting or threatening King Maha Vajiralongkorn and his close family.

The prosecutor earlier this month dropped the case against Chambers but police appealed that decision. The attorney-general overruled the appeal earlier this week, said Chambers’ lawyer, Wannaphat Jenroumjit.

“The case is now concluded,” she said, adding the legal team was appealing the revocation of his work visa.

The U.S. State Department had expressed alarm at the arrest of Chambers, saying the case “reinforces our longstanding concerns about the use of lese-majeste laws in Thailand.”

The charges against him, which came after a complaint by the royalist army, had stemmed from a blurb for an online academic seminar at which he was a speaker, according to his lawyers. The blurb was posted last year on the website of a research institute based outside Thailand.

Thailand’s constitution enshrines the king in a position of “revered worship” and royalists regard the palace as sacrosanct.

A party that won the 2023 election was dissolved last year over its campaign to amend the lese-majeste law, under which more than 280 people have been charged since 2020, according to the Thai Lawyers for Human Rights legal aid group, which also represented Chambers.

Thai immigration police confirmed Chambers’ passport had been returned to him and that he had left the country earlier on Thursday.

“The case is closed as the attorney-general decided to drop it,” Police Major General Sarawut Khonyai, a commander of immigration police in northern Thailand, told Reuters.

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