Religious Rights and Liberty Guaranteed and Protected in Thailand
His Majesty the King of Thailand, according to the constitution and tradition, is a Buddhist and the upholder of religions professed by local communities. He, therefore, is the centre of unity and concord of all Thai people.
Following in His Majesty’s footsteps, every Thai government has bestowed upon the people freedom to profess any religion. It has accorded them appropriate support to their faiths in spite of the fact that Buddhism is the national religion of Thailand, as the great majority of the Thai people are Buddhists.
Among several rights and liberties of the Thai people provided by every successive constitution, religious right and liberty have always been included. Section 25 of the Constitution of the Kingdom of Thailand (1978) may be quoted here as follows:
“Every person enjoys full liberty to profess any religion, any religious denomination or religious tenet, and to exercise a form of worship in accordance with his belief, provided that it is not contrary to his civic duties or public order or good morals.”
“In exercising the liberty referred to in the first paragraph, every person shall be protected from any act by the State, which is derogatory to his rights or detrimental to his due benefits on the ground of professing a religion, or a religious denomination or religious tenet, or exercising a form of worship in accordance with his belief which is different from that of others.”
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