Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit, who formed the Future Forward party, faces nine years in jail if found guilty

This article is more than 1 year old

This article is more than 1 year old

The leader of a new party that has challenged Thailand’s military government has been charged on Saturday with sedition, the latest legal action facing the rising star after a disputed March election.

The sedition charge, which was filed by the junta, was the second criminal case opened against Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit, 40, since he formed the progressive, youth-oriented Future Forward party last year.

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The 2015 case resurfaced after the Future Forward party made a surprisingly strong showing in the 24 March election, coming in third with 6.2m votes.

It was still uncertain which party could form a government after the election, the first since an army coup in 2014. Final results may not be clear for weeks.

Future Forward has joined an opposition “democratic front” alliance that will try to form a government and block the junta chief, Prayuth Chan-ocha, from staying in power.

Police told Reuters the complaint dated back to 2015 when Thanathorn, who was running his family’s car parts empire at the time, allegedly “provided assistance” to a leader of protesters against the 2014 military coup who violated a junta ban on gatherings of more than five people.

“Thank you for coming out,” he told supporters as he walked into police headquarters to hear the charges, asking the crowd to remain peaceful. “Don’t let today become a tool for those with ill intentions.”

The supporters chanted “Keep going!” Some held up signs with “SaveThanathorn”, which is also a trending hashtag on Twitter.

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Embassy representatives from the European Union, Germany and other countries were at the scene for observation.

Thanathorn is accused of breaking article 116 of the Thai criminal code, the equivalent of sedition, and article 189, for assisting others who committed a serious crime, the police summons showed.

He could face up to nine years in prison if found guilty.

According to electoral law, a criminal conviction could spell electoral disqualification for Thanathorn, who has looked set to become a member of parliament.

Thanathorn also faces a separate cybercrime charge over a speech he made on Facebook criticising the junta in July.

Prosecutors will decide on 26 April whether to put him on trial for the cybercrime charge.