BANGKOK, Thailand(AP)
The Thai government abruptly scrapped plans to sue Google after
the U.S. company agreed to remove from a Web site video clips
deemed insulting to the country's revered king, an official
said Friday.
The government blocked access to YouTube _ a popular
video-sharing site owned by Google _ on April 4, after Google Inc.
turned down Thailand's request to remove the clips seen as
offensive to King Bhumibol Adulyadej.
"We decided not to sue Google because it has agreed to
cooperate in removing 12 video clips from the YouTube Web
site," said Vissanu Meeyoo, the Ministry of Information and
Communications Technology spokesman.
One clip depicts shoes with the soles pointed toward the
king's image _ a major taboo in a culture where feet are
considered extremely dirty and offensive. The video's
soundtrack is the Thai national anthem.
"We have the deepest respect for His Majesty King Bhumibol
Adulyadej," Google wrote in a letter to the ministry. "We
likewise respect Thailand's law and tradition and hope that we
will be able to reach a mutually acceptable resolution to the
current controversy."
Google is based in Mountain View, Calif.
The ministry had planned to file a criminal lawsuit against
Google on charges of lese-majeste, or offense against the monarchy,
which carries a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison.
Thai authorities take the issue seriously. A Swiss man was
sentenced to 10 years in jail in March in the northern Thai city of
Chiang Mai after he defaced posters of the king during a drinking
binge. He was later pardoned and deported.
Critics have accused Thailand's current government of
blocking Web sites critical of the September 19 coup that overthrew
then-Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra.
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