The police in Isan, Thailand northeast, prevented local conservation group to show a documentary film on controversial petroleum concessions in the region, saying it might breach the Copyright Act.
According to Thai Lawyer for Human Rights (TLHR), 8-9 police officers from Nong Kung Sri Police Station in Nong Kung Sri District of the northeastern province of Kalasin on 23 August 2015 came to Khok Krue Subdistrict and ordered a local environmental conservation group to stop a screening of the documentary film titled ‘Open the Wound of Isan’s Petroleum’.
The documentary produced by Thai Public Broadcasting Service (Thai PBS) is about controversial oil and gas fields in Kalasin and the adjacent province of Khon Kaen, where the Thai authorities have given concession to Apico (Korat) Limited, a US-based oil and gas exploration company, to explore the area.
The officers pointed out that showing such documentary in public could be illegal under the Copyright Act and that the contents of the documentary might be false before asking the Nong Yai environmental conservation group to abruptly cancel the event.
There were about 20 villagers at the film screening which the group organised to educate the locals about the controversies of petroleum concessions, TLHR reported.
After the screening was aborted on 24 August 2015, the conservation group went to the police station to submit a letter, asking the police to allow the documentary screening to take place. However, the police said that the group need to obtain permission from Thai PBS first before showing the film.
According to the environmental conservation group, there should not be any legal complication from showing the documentary since it was produced by the Thai PBS for public interests and that it could be downloaded from Youtube.
In brief, Article 32 of the Copyright Act states that if intellectual properties of certain beneficiaries are being used in the manner that does not affect the rights and interests of the producers, the users shall not be held liable under the Copyright Act.
In February 2015, oil and gas explorations in Kalasin and Khon Kaen Province hit many national headlines after about 40 armed police and military officers assisted Apico (Korat) Limited, to move gas-drilling equipment into a potential oil field called Dongmoon in Kranuan District of Khon Kaen located at the border of Kalasin Province.
Kranuan District villagers have long opposed the plan to explore the oilfield because the plan and the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) were conducted without the involvement of local people who are to be directly affected by the operations.
In January 2015, the villagers collected names and submitted a petition to Khon Kaen Administrative Court in an attempt to stop the drilling operation. Although the court has not yet reached a verdict, the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) recently issued a statement to halt the project temporarily.
However, the police and military officers from Khon Kaen Internal Security Operations Command (ISOC) claimed that Department of Mineral Fuels has already permitted the gas exploration company to explore the field.
About 40 police officers guarding the main road to the potential oilfield in Kranuan District of the northeastern province of Khon Kaen on 13 February 2015 (file photo)