Thai well-wishers hold portraits of King Bhumibol Adulyadej as people gather at the Siriraj hospital where the King has been staying for months on the eve of his 88th birthday in Bangkok yesterday.

Reuters
Bangkok

Thailand’s edition of the International New York Times appeared yesterday with a blank space instead of a story on Thai royal wealth after the newspaper’s Bangkok printer decided it was too “sensitive” to run.
It was the second time this week that Eastern Printing PCL had censored the newspaper.
The most recent incident came on the eve of celebrations to mark the 88th birthday of the widely revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej, whose fragile health is a source of national anxiety.
He is in hospital in Bangkok and has not appeared in public since September 1.
Criticism of Thailand’s monarchy is outlawed by draconian lese majeste laws that provide for jail sentences of up to 15 years for each perceived insult to the monarchy.
The story excised from yesterday’s edition called for greater transparency at the Crown Property Bureau, the secretive agency that controls the monarchy’s institutional assets, worth tens of billions of dollars.
It was replaced by a blank space that carried the message: “The article in this space was removed by our printer in Thailand. The International New York Times and its editorial staff had no role in its removal.”
A story on Tuesday on Thailand’s moribund economy, which referenced King Bhumibol’s frail health, was also replaced with the same message.
Both stories were accessible in Thailand via the newspaper’s website and were widely circulated.
Eastern Printing PCL decided not to print the stories for fear of upsetting advertisers or shareholders, or attracting punitive lawsuits, company chairman Yuth Chinsupakul said.
“The printing press is liable and can be sued,” he said, adding that the company would not print stories deemed “sensitive to the current situation.”
In September, the company declined to produce the entire newspaper rather than print a story that later appeared online under the headline, “With King in Declining Health, Future of Monarchy in Thailand Is Uncertain.”
Yuth Chinsupakul denied the company had come under pressure from Thailand’s junta, which seized power in May 2014 and has doled out record jail sentences of up to 60 years for lese majeste offences.