Minggu, 26 Juli 2020

How a Singaporean man went from NUS PhD student to working for Chinese intelligence in the US - CNA

SINGAPORE: A National University of Singapore (NUS) PhD student who went to Beijing to give a presentation on politics was recruited by Chinese intelligence operatives and went on to work for them, collecting sensitive information about the US military and government.

Singaporean Yeo Jun Wei Dickson pleaded guilty on Friday (Jul 24) to using a fake consultancy business in the United States as a front to collect sensitive US information for Chinese intelligence. He entered his plea in federal court in Washington to one charge of operating illegally as a foreign agent.

In his plea, Yeo admitted to working between 2015 and 2019 for Chinese intelligence, spotting and assessing Americans with access to “valuable non-public information”.

This included information from a civilian working with the US Air Force on the F-35B aircraft programme, another from a US officer working in the Pentagon about the withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan, and a report about a person in the State Department about a US Cabinet member.

He recruited these people on social media under orders from the Chinese intelligence service, meeting operatives on more than 20 occasions.

RECRUITED WHILE DOING DOCTORATE IN NUS

Yeo’s work with Chinese intelligence operatives began as early as 2015, when he travelled to Beijing to give a presentation on the political situation in Southeast Asia, court documents show.

At the time, he was studying to receive his Doctorate of Philosophy in Public Policy from NUS.

After his presentation, he was recruited by individuals who claimed to be China-based think tanks. They offered Yeo money in exchange for political reports.

“Yeo came to understand that at least four of these individuals were intelligence operatives for the PRC (People’s Republic of China) government. One of the intelligence operatives later asked Yeo to sign a contract with the PRC People’s Liberation Army (PLA). Yeo refused to sign the contract but continued to work for this and other (Chinese intelligence service) operatives,” a signed statement of facts said.

The operatives tasked him with providing them information about international political, economic and diplomatic relations. They said they wanted “non-public information” – information that they referred to as “scuttlebutt”.

Scuttlebutt is a slang for rumours or gossip.

Tensions are rising between the US and China as they battle for global supremacy
Tensions are rising between the US and China as they battle for global supremacy. (Photo: AFP/Jason Lee)

“At first, the taskings were focused on Southeast Asia. Over time, the taskings became focused on the United States,” court documents read.

“Although these (Chinese intelligence service) operatives used pseudonyms in their interactions with Yeo, they were open about their affiliation with the PRC government. One of the operatives told Yeo that he and his boss worked for the PRC’s main intelligence unit.”

During one of Yeo’s trips to China, he met this operative and two others in a hotel room. During the meeting, the operative instructed Yeo with obtaining non-public information about the US Department of Commerce, artificial intelligence, and the trade war between China and the US.

He met operatives in various locations across China, and met with one Chinese intelligence contact about “19 to 20 times”. He met another operative about 25 times.

Whenever Yeo travelled to China for the meetings, he would be taken out of the customs line and brought to a separate office for admission into China.

He raised this issue with an operative, but they told Yeo they wanted to “conceal his identity” when he travelled into China.

USING SOCIAL MEDIA TO CONNECT WITH TARGETS

Yeo used social media to find and recruit US citizens who could provide him information. In 2018, a Chinese intelligence operative instructed him to create a fake consulting company and post job listings for the company on an online job-search website.

He used the same name as a prominent US consulting firm that conducts public and government relations. More than 400 resumes were sent in, with 90 per cent of them from US military and government personnel with security clearances.

Yeo would send the resumes to Chinese intelligence service operatives if he believed they would find the person’s resume interesting.

A “professional networking website” that was focused on career and employment was used by Yeo to find individuals with resumes and job descriptions that suggested they were likely to have access to valuable “non-public” information.

After he contacted potential targets online, the website began suggesting additional potential contacts.

“According to Yeo, the website’s algorithm was relentless,” court documents said.

“Yeo checked the professional networking website almost every day to review the new batch of potential contacts suggested to him by the site’s algorithm.

“Later, Yeo told US law enforcement that it felt almost like an addiction.”

stock mobile phone cbd 01
File photo of a man making a call.

FINDING TROUBLED TARGETS

After he identified his potential targets, he worked to recruit them to provide information and write reports.

He received guidance from Chinese intelligence contacts on how to recruit potential targets, including asking whether the targets were dissatisfied with work, were having financial troubles, had children to support, and whether they had a good rapport with Yeo.

The court was told of three people he managed to recruit to provide him with information.

In and around 2015, he spotted a civilian working with the US Air Force on the F-35B military aircraft programme. The person has high-level security clearance, and confided in Yeo that he was having financial trouble.

Yeo recruited him to write a report, and the civilian also provided information about the geopolitical implications of the Japanese purchasing F-35 aircraft from the US. Yeo drafted a report and sent it to his contacts in Chinese intelligence.

Between 2018 and 2019, Yeo spotted another person on the professional networking website. This person was employed at the US Department of State at the time, and told Yeo he was feeling dissatisfied at work and was having financial trouble.

He said he was worried about his upcoming retirement.

At Yeo’s direction, the man wrote a report about a then-serving member of the US Cabinet.

The man said he feared that if State Department officials discovered he had provided information to Yeo, it would jeopardise his retirement pension. Yeo paid him S$1,000 or S$2,000 for the report.

Another person was recruited via a social networking app, an US Army officer who was assigned to the Pentagon.

Yeo met the officer on multiple occasions, building up a “good rapport” with him. The officer confided in Yeo that he was traumatised by his military tours in Afghanistan.

A man uses a laptop computer at a wireless cafe in Beijing on July 1, 2009
File photo of a man using a laptop. (Photo: AFP/Frederic J Brown)

Yeo asked the officer to write reports for clients in Korea and other Asian countries, but did not say it would be given to a foreign government.

The officer wrote a report on how the withdrawal of US military forces from Afghanistan would impact China, and was paid S$2,000 or more for the report. The money was transferred to the officer’s wife’s bank account.

Yeo was told to recruit the US officer to provide more classified information, and was offered more money if the officer could become a “permanent conduit of information”.

After Yeo returned to the US in November 2019, he planned to ask the officer for the classified information and wanted to reveal who he was working for.

However, when he landed at the airport, he was stopped by law enforcement and arrested before he could ask for more information from the officer, court documents said.

COMMUNICATING FROM THE US

The statement of facts shows Yeo lived in Washington from about January 2019 to July 2019. Besides recruiting people online, he attended multiple events and speaking engagements at DC-area think tanks, making contact with several individuals from lobbying firms to defence contracting firms.

Yeo was told not to communicate with Chinese intelligence operatives when he travelled to the US over concerns their communications would be intercepted.

He was instructed to email operatives from a local coffee shop, if he needed to do so. Another told him not to take his phone and notebooks while travelling to the US.

WeChat logo
WeChat logo. (File photo: AFP/Martin BUREAU)

Yeo was also given a bank card to pay his American contacts for the information they provided. When Yeo was outside the US, he communicated with a Chinese intelligence operative through WeChat.

He was asked to use multiple phones and to change his WeChat account every time he contacted the Chinese intelligence service operatives.

“Yeo failed to notify the US Attorney General that he would be acting in the United States as an agent of a foreign government or foreign government official,” the court documents said.

Yeo faces a maximum of 10 years imprisonment and will be sentenced on Oct 9.

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2020-07-27 00:03:56Z
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Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy cancels Dickson Yeo's PhD candidature - CNA

SINGAPORE: The National University of Singapore's Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy (LKYSPP) has terminated the PhD candidature of Dickson Yeo Jun Wei with immediate effect, a spokesperson for the school said on Sunday (Jul 26).

Responding to CNA's queries, the spokesperson said in a statement that this move comes after information released by the US Department of Justice. The statement noted that Yeo has pleaded guilty in the US to one count of acting within the US as an illegal agent of a foreign power.

Yeo enrolled as a PhD student in LKYSPP's Public Policy programme in 2015. In 2019, he applied for, and was granted, a leave of absence, the spokesperson said.

Dickson Yeo screengrab
Screengrab of Dickson Yeo's profile, which was up on LKYSPP's website until Jul 25, 2020.

Checks by CNA showed that while he was a student at LKYSPP, Yeo researched and wrote papers on China’s treatment of small states. He proposed a thesis titled "How does China treat small states of Strategic Value?" According to Yeo’s profile on the Academia website, his thesis proposal was approved in principle by LKYSPP in August 2017. 

READ: Singaporean pleads guilty in US to working for Chinese intelligence

READ: Arrest of Dickson Yeo - Investigations have not revealed any direct threat to Singapore's security, says MHA

The 29 papers and presentations uploaded online revealed that he was also a visiting researcher at Peking University for International Relations and Public Policy. 

On his profile, Yeo also published a “brief note” on US President Barack Obama’s foreign policy. In the paper, he said Mr Obama’s “main goal” was to “re-establish American economic leadership” while “persecuting the war on terror by not alienating America’s friends”. 

In another paper studying US intervention in Afghanistan, Yeo had concluded that the intervention was “primarily dependent” on “obtaining international support for domestic legitimisation of action” following the 9/11 attacks. 

“This arbitrary definition of legitimacy, once obtained, ignored the principles of self determination and non-intervention,” he wrote. 

FORMER TOP DIPLOMAT LINKS YEO WITH EXPELLED PROFESSOR

In a Facebook post on Saturday, former top Singapore diplomat Bilahari Kausikan said that Yeo’s PhD supervisor at LKYSPP was former LKYSPP Professor Huang Jing. Mr Kausikan did not indicate the source of the information.

Prof Huang was identified in 2017 as an “agent of influence for a foreign country” by the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA). Without naming the country, MHA said that Prof Huang "knowingly interacted with intelligence organisations and agents of the foreign country, and cooperated with them to influence the Singapore Government’s foreign policy and public opinion in Singapore". 

Prof Huang gave what he claimed was “privileged information” about the foreign country to prominent and influential Singaporeans, including to a senior member of LKYSPP, with the aim of influencing their opinions in favour of that country, MHA said.

RECRUITED BY CHINESE AGENTS

Yeo pleaded guilty on Friday (Jul 24) to using a fake consultancy business in the United States as a front to collect sensitive US information for Chinese intelligence. He entered his plea in federal court in Washington to one charge of operating illegally as a foreign agent.

READ: How a Singaporean man went from NUS PhD student to working for Chinese intelligence in the US

In his plea, Yeo admitted to working between 2015 and 2019 for Chinese intelligence, spotting and assessing Americans with access to “valuable non-public information”. 

He was recruited by Chinese intelligence operatives and went on to work for them after he went to Beijing to give a presentation on politics. 

Yeo was arrested after he returned to the US in November 2019; upon his return, he had planned to ask an informant for classified information and also reveal whom he was working for, according to court documents. However, he was stopped by US law enforcement agents and arrested after he landed at the airport. 

LAST FACEBOOK POST IN NOVEMBER 2019

According to information from his Facebook page, Yeo was born on Feb 22, 1981. 

On Nov 6, 2019, Yeo posted on Facebook that he was “flying yet again”, and later posted a photo of a boarding counter at a Japanese airport that showed details for an 11.05am flight to John F Kennedy International Airport in New York. 

This was followed by Yeo’s last posts on Facebook on Nov 7, 2019. There were two - first, a post that said “Stressful Day”, and then he shared an inspirational quote from another page. 

Four weeks after his last posts, a friend commented on his “Stressful Day” post: “Dickson, where are you?” 

Dickson Yeo's Facebook posts
Screengrabs of Yeo’s last Facebook posts in early November 2019. He was arrested that month in the US by law enforcement agents.

FAKE CONSULTANCY BUSINESS

In court documents, it is said that Yeo was directed by Chinese intelligence to open up a fake consultancy and offer jobs in the US. 

The fake business bore the same name as a prominent US consulting firm that conducts public and government relations. 

The website of one such company - which has since been taken down - bears Yeo’s name, and what appears to be his email address and Singapore phone number. It was further claimed that the company was “formed as a result of a brain-storm between multiple parties in Singapore and Shanghai”. 

The company also claimed to serve as a “consulting bridge” between “multiple parties” and to offer “in-depth analysis on the risk and market entry issues centered on the Eurasian Region”. 

According to court documents, Yeo received more than 400 resumes, 90 per cent of which were from US military or government personnel with security clearances, and gave his Chinese handlers the resumes that he thought they would find interesting. 

Before becoming a PhD candidate at LKYSPP, Yeo was also an energy analyst at the NUS Energy Studies Institute in 2011.

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2020-07-26 09:41:31Z
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Discussions on Johor-Singapore cross-border travel for general public won't happen until 'a couple of weeks' later - TODAYonline

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  1. Discussions on Johor-Singapore cross-border travel for general public won't happen until 'a couple of weeks' later  TODAYonline
  2. Singapore, Malaysia have settled arrangements for cross-border travel from Aug 10, not ready yet for daily commuting: Vivian Balakrishnan  CNA
  3. Coronavirus: Singapore-Malaysia travel arrangements for permit holders, business travellers finalised  The Straits Times
  4. Cross-border travel between Malaysia and Singapore expected in August  The Star Online
  5. Malaysia-Singapore cross-border travel kicks off Aug 17  New Straits Times
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-07-26 06:33:48Z
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'Everyone is panicking' over quarantine, says UK tourist in Spain - CNA

MADRID: British tourists flying home on Sunday (Jul 26) after a holiday in Spain angrily reacted to an abrupt decision by their government to make everyone arriving from the Mediterranean country spend 14 days in quarantine.

Britain's decision late on Saturday to take Spain off a safe-travel list over a rise in COVID-19 cases took effect from midnight local time, leaving travellers with no time to dodge it, and with major concerns about their returns, tourists at Madrid's Barajas airport said.

"It's really bad because it's just come all of a sudden, it's not given very much time to prepare so everyone is now panicking," said Emily Harrison, from Essex, who was taking a flight to London and faced the prospect of having to self-isolate for two weeks.

READ: UK advises against travel to mainland Spain over COVID-19

"It ruins plans for everybody," Harrison said. "We had a wedding to go to and we had plans to visit friends and family who we haven't seen in a very long time and now we are going to have to cancel all those plans, so it's really quiet upsetting."

Spain was one of the worst hit countries in Europe by the coronavirus pandemic, with more than 290,000 cases and over 28,000 deaths. It imposed very strict lockdown measures to contain the spread, gradually easing them earlier in the summer.

Spain had been on a list of countries that the British government had said were safe for travellers to visit - meaning tourists returning home would not have to go into quarantine.

But it has seen a surge of cases in the last few weeks, forcing lockdowns to be reimposed in some areas.

The British decision follows steps by Norway on Friday to re-impose a 10-day quarantine requirement for people arriving from Spain, while France advised people not to travel to Spain's northeastern region of Catalonia.

But a collapse of tourism from Britain would have far more of an impact on Spain's economy.

Britons made up more than 20 per cent of foreign visitors to Spain last year, the largest group by nationality, a key source of income for a country that depends on tourism for about 12 per cent of its economy.

Some British tourists pointed out that Spain's mask-wearing rules are much stricter than those in Britain.

"We're quite frustrated by it to be honest, because it actually feels safer in Spain," British tourist Carolyne Lansell said of the quarantine decision.

Lansell was flying to Ibiza from Madrid for a 10-day holiday before going home.

Antonio Perez, the mayor of Benidorm, a resort on Spain's Costa Blanca that is hugely dependent on British tourists, said the British quarantine rule was a "tough blow".

"We've suffered a lot this year and then this happened. We thought that the British were going to come back but this makes things harder for now," he said.

BOOKMARK THIS: Our comprehensive coverage of the coronavirus outbreak and its developments

Download our app or subscribe to our Telegram channel for the latest updates on the coronavirus outbreak: https://cna.asia/telegram

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2020-07-26 06:02:34Z
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Sabtu, 25 Juli 2020

Malaysian ex-PM Najib to learn fate in first 1MDB trial - CNA

KUALA LUMPUR: A Malaysian court will hand down its verdict in Najib Razak's first corruption trial on Tuesday (Jul 28), nearly 16 months after it began probing the former prime minister's role in the multi-billion-dollar 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) scandal.

Najib and his inner circle are accused of plundering the sovereign wealth fund in a mind-boggling fraud that stretched around the world.

Stolen cash was allegedly used to bankroll Hollywood hit The Wolf Of Wall Street, starring Leonardo DiCaprio, and US investment titan Goldman Sachs also became embroiled in the scandal.

Anger at the looting played a large part in the shock loss by Najib's coalition in elections two years ago after six decades in power.

READ: Malaysian court orders ex-PM Najib to pay US$400 million tax bill

Najib lost power in 2018 elections, in large part due to accusations of his involvement in the 1MDB
Najib Razak lost power in the 2018 elections, in large part due to accusations of his involvement in the 1MDB scandal. (Photo: AFP/Mohd Rasfan)

He was subsequently arrested and hit with dozens of charges over the fraud.

Najib is currently facing three separate, 1MDB-linked trials, and the first finally reaches its climax this week in the Kuala Lumpur High Court.

The case centres on the transfer of RM42 million ringgit (US$9.9 million) from former 1MDB unit SRC International into Najib's bank accounts.

He denies any wrongdoing, and his lawyer Muhammad Shafee Abdullah told AFP ahead of the verdict: "I feel good about the defence."

READ: Goldman Sachs, Malaysia agree to US$3.9 billion settlement over 1MDB

Malaysia's former prime minister Najib Razak, seen here in September 2018, is facing four
Malaysia's former prime minister Najib Razak, seen here in September 2018, is facing four charges of corruption and three of money-laundering in the case. (Photo: AFP/Mohd Rasfan)

The ex-leader, who is facing four charges of corruption and three of money-laundering in the case, insists he was ignorant of the bank transfers.

His defence team has portrayed Najib as a victim and instead sought to paint financier Low Taek Jho, a key figure in the scandal who has been charged in the US and Malaysia, as the mastermind.

Low, whose whereabouts are unknown, maintains his innocence.

POLITICAL TURBULENCE

Prosecutors insist Najib was in control of the 1MDB unit and that they have a solid case, but observers believe recent political upheaval could affect the outcome of the trial, which began in April last year.

Najib's scandal-mired party returned to power in March as part of a coalition after a reformist administration collapsed.

Since then, 1MDB-linked charges were unexpectedly dropped against the ex-leader's stepson Riza Aziz, one of the Wolf Of Wall Street producers, in exchange for him agreeing to return assets to Malaysia.

Prosecutors also dropped dozens of charges against Najib ally Musa Aman, the former leader of Sabah state.

If Najib - currently free on bail - is convicted on Tuesday, he could be sentenced the same day.

Each charge of corruption carries a maximum jail term of 20 years, and each money-laundering count is punishable by a term of up to 15 years.

READ: Malaysia's speaker denies ordering judge to adjourn 1MDB trial so that Najib can address parliament

Low Taek Jho is a key figure in the scandal who has been charged in the US and Malaysia. This file
Low Taek Jho is a key figure in the scandal who has been charged in the US and Malaysia. This file photo shows a boat owned by Low. (Photo: AFP/Sonny Tumbelaka)

But the 67-year-old is likely to appeal, and may not be jailed straight away.

If he is found guilty and the conviction is upheld, then he would also be barred from political office for several years.

Bridget Welsh, a Malaysia expert from the University of Nottingham, said a conviction would be viewed positively by many for bringing "some accountability on the scandal of 1MDB".

By contrast, an acquittal "will do serious damage to Malaysia's international reputation", she added.

Authorities in several countries are investigating the 1MDB theft, which funded a global spending spree that included the purchase of high-end real estate, artworks and a superyacht.

The amounts involved in Najib's first case are small compared to those in his second and most significant trial, which centres on allegations he illicitly obtained more than US$500 million.

READ: ‘Rosmah wasn’t scolding me’: Najib on leaked audio clips related to 1MDB scandal

If Najib -- currently free on bail -- is convicted on Tuesday, he could be sentenced on the same day
If Najib - currently free on bail - is convicted on Jul 28, he could be sentenced on the same day. (Image: AFP/John Saeki)

US authorities, who are investigating the fund as money was allegedly laundered through the American financial system, believe US$4.5 billion was looted from 1MDB.

Malaysia had charged Goldman Sachs and a string of its current and former staff as the investment bank had helped arrange bond issues worth US$6.5 billion for 1MDB.

Prosecutors had claimed that large amounts were misappropriated during the fundraising.

But on Friday, Malaysia agreed to a US$3.9 billion settlement with Goldman in exchange for dropping all criminal proceedings against the Wall Street titan.

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2020-07-26 05:19:58Z
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Singapore extending consular aid to Dickson Yeo, who confessed to acting as foreign agent for China in the US - The Straits Times

SINGAPORE - Singapore is extending consular assistance to Dickson Yeo, a Singaporean who pleaded guilty on Friday (July 24) to acting under the direction of Chinese intelligence officials to obtain sensitive information from Americans, said Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan on Sunday (Jul 26).

"He's a Singapore citizen. Our duty is to provide consular assistance to him, according to his needs," said Dr Balakrishnan, who was speaking to reporters at Woodlands Train Checkpoint after a meeting with Malaysian Foreign Minister Hishammuddin Hussein at the mid-point of the Causeway to discuss arrangements for cross-border travel between Singapore and Malaysia.

He added that he has no further information to share on the Dickson Yeo case, beyond what has been published. He did not comment when asked about actions that Singapore is taking to detect and prevent such espionage agents from operating locally and abroad.

Yeo Jun Wei, also called Dickson Yeo, pleaded guilty in federal court in Washington DC to one count of acting within the United States as an illegal foreign agent.

Court documents said that he used his political consultancy in the United States as a front to collect information for Chinese intelligence, targeting American military and government employees with security clearances on professional networking social media sites.

Yeo would pay them to write reports which he said were meant for clients in Asia, but which were in reality sent to the Chinese government without the writers' knowledge.

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2020-07-26 03:36:35Z
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Thailand's Civil Partnership Bill sparks further debate on same-sex couple rights - CNA

BANGKOK: When Kridchaya and Pimsirinuch decided to share their lives together and build a family of their own, marriage was not on their mind.

It was not because they did not want to wed. But the fact that they are both women bars them from having a legal relationship in Thailand, where same-sex couples are not recognised by the law.

“We didn’t think about having a legal partnership because it doesn’t exist,” said Kridchaya Tangtweetham, a business owner and mother of a three-month-old girl.

The couple spent five years trying to conceive and at least half a million baht (US$15,800) on assisted reproductive technology. The arrival of their child, from their perspective, has made the family complete.

Legally though, they are not equally protected by Thai law as heterosexual families. But this could change soon.

Thailand could become the first country in Southeast Asia to allow same-sex couples have a legal relationship. Its House of Representatives is set to review two legal proposals aimed at extending more rights to people within the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex and queer (LGBTIQ) community. ​​​​​​​

One of them comes from the Move Forward Party, which proposed amending the marriage section of Thailand’s Civil and Commercial Code to include the LGBTIQ group.

Currently, the law only permits marriage between males and females, who are legally recognised as husband and wife. 

The party has proposed to amend the code so that couples of any sex can be recognised as spouses, filling the legal void that has deprived many same-sex couples of legal rights and protection.

“By amending the existing law on marriage, the rights afforded to opposite-sex couples will be extended. This will then allow people of any sex to marry. It’s the right solution, given that every citizen must use the same law and the same standard. This is equality,” said Tunyawaj Kamolwongwat, Member of Parliament from the Move Forward Party.

The other proposal is the Civil Partnership Bill prepared by the Ministry of Justice. It was endorsed by the Cabinet on Jul 8.

Unlike the proposed change to the existing law on marriage, this Bill creates a new legal term of “civil partners” to define same-sex couples registered under the Bill, and extends them certain rights enjoyed by husbands and wives.

For instance, civil partners can adopt children and have the power to act on behalf of one another in criminal cases. They can also inherit in the absence of a will. 

However, civil partners are not entitled to personal income tax exemptions given to opposite-sex couples, or access benefits of state employees they enjoy.

Some have hailed these developments as a step forward for the LGBTIQ community, while others are either against it or say that more still needs to be done. 

READ: Taiwan gay couples urge foreign marriage rights after Tsai win

GOVERNMENT SAYS BILL WILL STRENGTHEN FAMILIES, ACTIVISTS SAY IT'S NOT GOOD ENOUGH

The Civil Partnership Bill will now be reviewed by the House of Representatives, along with the amendments to the Civil and Commercial Code proposed by the Move Forward Party.

According to deputy government spokeswoman Ratchada Thanadirek, the Civil Partnership Bill could help strengthen families with gender diversity and promote human rights.

“As for other rights that are only available to opposite-sex couples, when the Bill comes into effect, it will be evaluated and developed to accommodate different contexts, including amending related laws,” she said in a press conference on Jul 8 after the cabinet endorsed the legal draft.

Thailand pride rainbow
People walk past a reflection of the Pride Month logo projected on a giant screen after heavy rain in downtown Bangkok on Jun 17, 2020. (Photo: AFP/Mladen Antonov)

For some rights advocates, however, the government’s offer is not good enough.

“It’s like the LGBTIQ shouldn’t be given certain rights,” said Naiyana Supapueng from the Foundation for SOGI Rights and Justice, which advocates human rights in relation to sexual orientation and gender identity in Thailand.

For her, the use of “civil partners” instead of “married couple” is discriminatory and the fact that same-sex couples do not benefit from a set of rights afforded to heterosexual couples are unconstitutional.

She questioned, for instance, why Thai law only allows the husband or wife of civil servants to enjoy their spouse’ healthcare benefits and excludes same-sex partners when they are all citizens of Thailand.

“It means the LGBTIQ are second-class citizens when in fact, citizens should be equal before the law and receive the same protection,” Naiyana said.

“I think we mistakenly view gender diversity as an issue of marginalised people when it’s actually about all the citizens. We should realise that sexual orientation and gender identity is a human right. Every citizen should know we have liberty and freedom to choose how to live our life according to our sex or gender,” she added.

READ: We do - Taiwan's gay newlyweds urge Asia to follow their lead

GENDER EQUALITY OR DISCRIMINATION?

Asst Prof Ronnapoom Samakkeekarom from the Faculty of Public Health at the Thammasat University pointed out that there are two sides of the same coin.

On one hand, it is seen as a step forward to promote gender equality in Thailand, where the group has long fought for legal recognition.

“It’s a legal form of social innovation that could change public perception and promote gender equality among Thais. If you look at the legal outcome from an academic point of view, I think the bill could bring about change in the context of equality in the Thai society,” he said.

By recognising same-sex couples, he added, the law could change people’s mindset towards the LGBTIQ community and help create more social acceptance of the population.

Its outcome could lead to social change and set up a new standard for equality.

But on the other hand, the Bill has also been criticised for what appears to be discrimination against same-sex couples, by creating a new gender box to differentiate them from heterosexual couples and only granting them certain rights. 

“By stipulating that people of the same sex can enter into a civil partnership, the Bill has created a new standard and a specific group. It gives rights as a charity, a supplement,” Ronnapoom said.

According to Ronnapoom, however, it is unfair to say law makers who drafted the civil partnership bill have no understanding of the LGBTIQ group. Rather, he said, it depends on from which point of view the Bill is analysed.

“Looking from the Ministry of Justice’s point of view, they know it would take a very long time to amend the Civil and Commercial Code because technocrats would come out to defend a main law of the country,” he told CNA.

On the contrary, the bill on civil partnership could take less time to come into effect and therefore serve same-sex couples more promptly by filling the legal void that bars them from officially founding a family, he added.

“There are people who are in trouble now, with no social resources to compensate for the lack of legal recognition,” Ronnapoom said.

These people with limited social resources are highly vulnerable.

RELIGIOUS GROUP AGAINST THE MOVE

Meanwhile, a religious group has voiced its opposition to the Civil Partnership Bill.

"The Bill goes against ethics and will greatly disgrace society. Thailand is a country that has long valued the importance of religious teachings and ethics, supporting good deeds that are based on religious principles to promote the family institution and its society,” the Muslim for Peace Foundation said in a statement on its Facebook page on Jul 9.

“This bill could cause social disintegration, destroy ethics, disregard religious teachings, and lead to a social crisis that may escalate to a point where it cannot be remedied,” it added.

The statement drew heavy online criticisms and was later withdrawn.

Thailand LGBT rally
Participants rally to advocate gay rights in Bangkok on Nov 29, 2018. (File photo: AFP/Lillian SUWANRUMPHA)

Ronnapoom noted that there is a general perception that the LGBTIQ community is well-accepted in Thailand, while in fact, their identities are simply tolerated as long as they do not infringe on the rights of heterosexual citizens.

Members of the LGBTIQ community have presence and roles in various sectors, from entertainment to education and politics. 

“A cultural explanation would be that Thais are considerate – we think about others. This creates a cultural buffer that prevents them from confrontation. This buffer helps the Thai society coexist with the LGBTIQ group. But coexist doesn’t mean understand,” he told CNA.

A number of Thais still associate LGBTIQ with abnormality as their society hardly tries to create a better understanding of the group, he added.

“People just accept to coexist with them,” Ronnapoom said. 

"HOW LONG SHOULD WE KEEP WAITING?"

The two proposals regarding legal partnership of same-sex couples may have attracted different views in Thailand. Still, many people see them as a result of the growing awareness of gender diversity and equality in Thailand.

Thailand LGBT rally rainbow flags
Participants hold rainbow flags during a rally advocating gay rights in Bangkok on Nov 29, 2018. (File photo: AFP/Lillian SUWANRUMPHA)

For Kridchaya and Pimsirinuch, the Civil Partnership bill may not give them the same legal protections as heterosexual couples but it presents them with rights they never thought they would have.

For them, “civil partners” is simply a legal term created to promote gender diversity in a society where same-sex couples do not have any legal recognition – an option for couples like them who otherwise are legally non-existent.

“When you’re talking about gender diversity, the law should be diverse too,” Kridchaya said.

“It’s not that we’re totally satisfied but we’re aware that in practice, in reality, we can do it step by step instead of taking a leap,” Pimsirinuch added.

“What if the equal marital rights never happen? How long should we keep waiting for that?”

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2020-07-25 22:02:09Z
CBMic2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmNoYW5uZWxuZXdzYXNpYS5jb20vbmV3cy9hc2lhL3RoYWlsYW5kLWNpdmlsLXBhcnRuZXJzaGlwLWxnYnRpcS1nZW5kZXItZXF1YWxpdHktZGlzY3JpbWluYXRpb24tMTI5NTQ2MTTSAQA