Winyat Chatmontree, a lawyer for the 12 Thai men said Thursday they were arrested in several different provinces this week for violating the Computer Crime Act
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Police in Thailand has arrested 12 people who shared a Facebook post about a rape allegation by a British tourist who claims that the police refused to accept her complaint when she reported the crime.
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Winyat Chatmontree, a lawyer for the 12 Thai men said Thursday they were arrested in several different provinces this week for violating the Computer Crime Act. They could face up to five years in prison and fines for spreading false information and damaging national security.
Police deny turning away the British woman and say their investigation determined her claim of being raped on the island of Koh Tao in June was untrue.
The 19-year-old woman, who has since returned to England, has told journalists she believes she was drugged by someone who spiked her drink, and woke up on a beach to find that she had been raped and robbed.
"From our initial investigation, we concluded and reported to our police commissioner that at the moment there is no evidence or witnesses to prove that the incident has happened, not on a drug claim or a rape claim," Deputy Tourist Police chief Maj. Gen. Surachet Hakpan, head of the investigation, said at a news conference Thursday.
Koh Tao, though popular with foreign backpackers, has gained an unsavory reputation since the murders of British nationals Hannah Witheridge and David Miller, who were beaten to death on a beach there in 2014.
That case has been plagued with speculation that the two migrant workers from Myanmar convicted and sentenced to death for the crime were only scapegoats. Skeptics point to several other unexplained tourist deaths on the island, suggesting that well-connected local residents have covered up deadly attacks.
The Computer Crime Act has been used to prosecute for Facebook postings about the country's monarchy or political issues but rarely for purely criminal cases.
"These men just simply clicked share on a Facebook post. They have no intention of spreading false rumours or damaging the country. I can only assume that the police made such a quick arrest to stop people from sharing news on this case, which they see as bad to the tourism industry." said lawyer Winyat.
Thai police said two more arrest warrants are out for suspects living aboard.
One is a British editor who reported the news on her website, Samui Times, and the other is a Thai self-styled online sleuth who has written Facebook posts about the allegation.
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