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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
World
Hannah Ellis-Petersen South-east Asia correspondent

YouTube host faces charges for criticising Thai princess's Miss Universe dress

The dress designed by Princess Sirivannavari Nariratana for Miss Universe Thailand 2018.
The dress designed by Princess Sirivannavari Nariratana for Miss Universe Thailand 2018. Photograph: Miss Universe

A popular YouTube presenter may be facing charges in Thailand after she criticised a Miss Universe dress that was designed by the daughter of the king.

Wanchaleom Jamneanphol, a popular online TV host, has been the subject of several charges made to the police under Thailand’s notoriously strict cybercrimes and lèse-majesté laws – which make it illegal to say anything negative about the monarchy – for her comments online describing a dress designed by Princess Sirivannavari Nariratana as ugly.

The blue dress was worn by the Thai entrant, Sophida Kanchanarin, at this month’s Miss Universe pageant, which was held just outside Bangkok.

Jamneanphol’s post criticising the design of the couture gown went viral and prompted Kitjanut Chaiyosburana, a Thai millionaire businessman and aspiring politician, to file charges against her this week.

“I cannot accept that a well-known individual in the online world expressed negative opinions that affect the country’s reputation,” Chaiyosburana told reporters, describing the post as “irresponsible behaviour”.

The charges were filed and accepted by the Thai police’s technology crime suppression division.

Thailand has some of the strictest lèse-majesté laws in the world, punishing anyone who “defames, insults or threatens the king, the queen, the heir-apparent or the regent” who are greatly revered in Thailand and hold considerable power.

The law, which has been in place since 1908, has been increasingly enforced ever since the Thai military took power in 2014 in a coup, with many people punished with harsh jail sentences. Critics say the law is used to suppress freedom of speech, and campaigners and the United Nations have repeatedly called for it to be amended. The computer crimes laws also strictly control what Thai people can post online and carry equally severe sentences.

Jamneanphol has since deleted the post on Facebook and apologised in a post online, in which she emphasised she “did not have any intention to insult or disrespect the high institution”.

“I merely did not know the full consequences of my actions via my posts and comments, which caused damage to Your Royal Highness and the monarchy,” said Jamneanphol.

Nariratana, who is the only daughter of King Vajiralongkorn and former consort Sujarinee Vivacharawongse, is the founder and creative director of her own high-end fashion line, Sirivannavari. She is often seen on the pages of Tatler and Vogue and is widely described as Thailand’s “most fashionable royal”.

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