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Human rights in Thailand : ウィキペディア英語版 | Human rights in Thailand
The current (2007) Constitution, drafted by a body appointed by the then military junta, states at Article 4: "The human dignity, rights, liberty and equality of the people shall be protected."〔() 2007 Constitution (unofficial translation)〕 Articles 26 to 69 set out an extensive range of specific rights in such areas as criminal justice, education, non-discrimination, religion and freedom of expression. The 2007 enactment reinstated much of the extensive catalogue of rights explicitly recognized in the People's Constitution of 1997. That Constitution outlined the right to freedom of speech, freedom of press, peaceful assembly, association, religion, and movement within the country and abroad. The 1997 Constitution was abrogated in September 2006 following a military coup. The military regime imposed an interim constitution which had effect until the current version was approved a year later by referendum. ==Constitutional guarantees== Many new rights were introduced in the 1997 Constitution. These include the right to free education, the rights of traditional communities, and the right to peacefully protest coups and other extra-constitutional means of acquiring power, the rights of children, the elderly, handicapped people's rights, and equality of the genders. Freedoms of information, the right to public health and education and consumer rights are also recognized. A total of 40 rights, compared to only nine rights in the Constitution of 1932, were recognized in the 1997 Constitution.〔Thanet Aphornsuvan, (The Search for Order: Constitutions and Human Rights in Thai Political History ), 2001 Symposium: Constitutions and Human Rights in a Global Age: An Asia Pacific perspective〕
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