More than a dozen of soldiers have arrested an anti-junta activist who vowed to wear a red shirt on the cremation day of the late King Bhumibol.
On 24 October 2017, three soldiers in uniform and 11 other in plain clothes arrested Ekkachai Hongkangwan, a political activist and former lèse majesté convict from his house.
The military then asked whether he prefers to be taken to a resort in Kanchanaburi Province for a few days or a unspecified military base.
The soldiers showed up after he posted on his Facebook account on Friday that he plans to wear red shirt, symbol of the anti-establishment red shirt, on Thursday, the cremation day of the late King in which Thai people are expected to wear black.
He said that many people threatened him on Facebook after he posted the statement, adding that a police officer on Saturday warned him about his plan, but he replied that he would do it.
He said that his intention was to execute his rights to question why everyone has to wear black.
Ekkachai was imprisoned for two years and eight months after he was convicted under Article 112 of the Criminal Code, the lèse majesté law, for selling CD copies of the news programme of an Australian Broadcasting Corp. He was released in November 2015.
Ekkachai Hongkangwan (file photo)