Published 3 months ago • loading... • Updated 3 months ago
A writer is cleared by Thai court after Malaysian agency withdraws defamation case
Settlement on Jan. 12 led to dropping criminal and civil defamation cases against Murray Hunter, with about 10 articles retracted, ending cross-border legal dispute.
On Monday, the Thai court formally withdrew the defamation case by the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission against Murray Hunter after mediation.
The dispute began with articles on Hunter's Substack, raising alarms about transnational SLAPPs, and the Thai lawyer warned 'the process is the punishment' in such cases.
He was arrested at Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi Airport last year, jailed overnight, released on 20,000 baht bail with his passport seized; the defamation charge carries a two-year maximum prison term and 200,000 baht fine, and Hunter said his Substack was unblocked in Malaysia.
Hunter apologised and retracted about 10 articles, and the charge was withdrawn in the Bangkok South Criminal Court with no costs or penalties; he got his passport back and plans to stay in Thailand while writing a book.
Free-Speech advocates expressed alarm, calling the case a form of cross-border repression as PEN International, Human Rights Watch and the Committee to Protect Journalists protested Hunter's arrest and warned Malaysia's use of criminal defamation laws was alarming.