By THANYARAT DOKSONE | Associated Press
ViewPhotoAssociated
Press - In this undated photo, Thai director Nontawat Numbenchapol is
seen at the site while making movie in Sisaket province, northeastern
Thailand. Nontawat said on Wednesday, April 24, 2013 that
BANGKOK (AP) — Thailand's film censors have banned a documentary about the country's long-running border dispute with neighboring Cambodia as a threat to national security, the filmmaker said Wednesday.
"Boundary" tells the story of the Thai-Cambodian conflict through
accounts of an ex-soldier who lives near the border, as well as
villagers from the two countries. It also touches on other conflicts in
Thailand, including the 9-year-old insurgency in the south and the
political divisiveness that led to a deadly military crackdown on
protesters in 2010.
Director Nontawat Numbenchapol
said the Culture Ministry's film screening office informed him that the
movie's content "is a threat to national security and international
relations." He said he will appeal the ban.
The border dispute has its roots in a 1962 International Court of
Justice ruling that the 1,000-year-old Preah Vihear temple stands in
Cambodia. Thailand's government argues that definitive boundaries have
never been drawn in the area around the World Heritage-listed site.
The dispute has become a rallying point for many Thai nationalists,
who don't recognize the court's ruling and say the area, including the
temple, belongs to Thailand and they have pressured politicians to keep
pressing the issue.
The Thai and Cambodian armies have repeatedly clashed in the disputed
area in recent years, including in April 2011, when 17 soldiers and a
civilian were killed and thousands near the temple were displaced.
In 2011, the court in The Hague created a demilitarized zone around the temple but troops were not withdrawn until a year later.
The court is currently hearing testimony from both sides after they asked it to clarify its original ruling.
According to Nontawat, the film and video screening subcommittee said
some of the claims in the documentary, including accounts from the
Cambodian side, were "groundless."
The censors also said some information presented in the film was
still being deliberated by the court and had yet to be formally
resolved.
Nontawat said he was stunned by the decision.
"I made this movie to create the space for people living near the
border to speak their mind," he said. "Now I have to work harder not
only to let people know about the border issue, but also about freedom
of expression."
Thailand's censors target a wide range of political and social
issues. They blur out cigarettes and alcohol on television and crack
down on any perceived criticism of the monarchy.
Last year, the film board banned a Thai adaptation of Shakespeare's
"Macbeth," saying it has content that causes divisiveness among the
people. In 2011, the board also banned a movie called "Insects in the
Backyard" about a transgender father struggling to raise two children,
citing scenes it deemed immoral and pornographic.
"In the U.S., a movie like 'Bowling for Columbine,' which boldly
criticized the president, can still be shown. It sparked constructive
arguments and made the country more developed," Nontawat said. "In
Thailand, the more you censor things, the more you make the country more
outdated."
"Boundary" premiered at the Berlin
International Film Festival in February and received financial support
from international movie funds.
1 comment:
No need to sensor anything let it all out and upto the viewers to decide whether or not to believe in Gov't officials who wants this documentary sensor because they want to hide something behind the sensorship.This documentary must be not SENSOR.This young Thai is open mind individual did a good job to express himself about this issue.
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