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<div> <div>At least four universities in Thailand have complied with the junta’s censorship measures by prohibiting their students and lecturers from discussing the junta-sponsored draft charter and the August referendum.&nbsp;</div> </div> <h2>Khon Kaen University bans public discussion of draft charter &nbsp;</h2> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div> <div>On Saturday, 30 July 2016, Jirawat Sanitchon, Deputy Dean of Khon Kaen University’s Faculty of Agriculture, barred student activists from hosting ‘Talk for Freedom’, a public discussion on the draft charter to be held the following day, reasoning that the tal </div></div>
<p>A network of Thai university students has submitted a statement to the Education Ministry to call for an end to hierarchy and the abuse of human rights during university hazing rituals.</p> <p>Students from the <a href="https://www.facebook.com/AntiSOTUSPage">Network for Hazing Reform for Human Rights</a> on Monday, 3 August 2015, submitted a statement to the Ministry of Education to state the group’s stand against the notorious SOTUS system found in many of Thailand’s universities.</p>
By United Nations Development Programme |
<p><strong>BANGKOK, Thailand, 8 December 2014&nbsp;</strong>– Findings from a recent university survey revealed that a majority of students can identify corruption and integrity, but feel they have no other choice than to participate in corruption when confronted with opportunities to gain an advantage.</p>