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Exiled in Laos, Thai activist band Faiyen live in fear for their lives since 2014 military coup

  • The musicians fled their homes in neighbouring Thailand in 2014, afraid of arrest after a military coup overthrew their nation’s elected government

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Thai band Faiyen from an undisclosed location in Laos. Nithiwat Wannasiri, Worravut Thueakchaiyaphum, Romchalee Sombulrattanakul, Trairong Sinseubpol. Photo: AP
Associated Press

They are members of a folk music group living communally in the Southeast Asian nation of Laos, but they are in fear for their lives.

The musicians from the band Faiyen fled their homes in neighbouring Thailand in 2014, afraid of arrest after a military coup overthrew their nation’s elected government. Their music was their crime.

Drawn into the polarised politics of Thailand’s last decade, some of their songs mocked the monarchy, a sacred institution as far as many Thais – and the law – are concerned.

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For their heresies, they now believe they may be kidnapped or killed. Their fears are not without justification.

Pro-democracy demonstrators at a rally in Bangkok. Photo: EPA
Pro-democracy demonstrators at a rally in Bangkok. Photo: EPA

Since last December, six fellow Thai exiles in Laos associated with antimonarchist views have disappeared in suspicious circumstances and their families presume they are dead. The mutilated bodies of two washed up on the Thai side of the Mekong River. A veteran far-left activist who in the 1970s was in the jungle with the Communist Party of Thailand disappeared along with them.

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