Thai rights groups denounce martial law
Updated | By Lonwabo Miso

He cited the need to restore peace and order after months of protests.
Prayut is now also prime minister and is due to lead the first meeting of a military-stacked cabinet on Tuesday.
Martial law bans political gatherings, allows the detention of dissidents for up to seven days without charge and permits trials in a military court.
In the days and weeks following the coup more than 570 people were ordered to report to authorities, according to a report submitted by the Thai lawyers for Human Rights to the interior ministry.
It said more than 260 people were arrested with 87 now facing legal action, 61 of them in military courts.
Martial law "is tantamount to a twilight zone of judicial process during which the officials have broad powers without checks and review", the report said, adding such powers may lead to "serious violations... of fundamental human rights".
The release of the study, "The Human rights Situation 100 Days After the Coup", was scheduled last week but authorities warned its authors to postpone publication.
The report expressed particular concern over trials in military courts and the use of a controversial royal defamation law to protect key members of the monarchy.
Fourteen people have been charged under the strict '112' defamation law since the coup, according to the study, which said the jurisdiction of military courts has also been widened to hear some lese majeste cases.
"Only one in three judges in a military court has to have a law degree and the rest are simply commissioned officials who may not even have any legal background," it added.
Last week the United Nations said it was "seriously concerned" about the worsening human rights situation in Thailand.
Junta spokesman Winthai Suvaree said the report was "one-sided" adding "we don't understand their (the report authors') intentions".
He also denied anyone detained in the post-coup period has been tortured, as alleged in the report, adding that lifting martial law was being "considered carefully... by security agencies and not for political reasons".
Prayut says he was forced to take power after months of protests against then-premier Yingluck Shinawatra's government left 28 people dead and hundreds wounded.
He has ruled out holding new elections before October 2015, despite international appeals for a return to democracy, vowing first to oversee reforms said to be aimed at cleaning up politics and society.
Critics say the coup is a smokescreen for a purge of the influence of Yingluck's divisive older brother, the self-exiled billionaire former premier Thaksin Shinawatra. -AFP
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