Hundreds of protesters have gathered outside government offices in Bangkok yesterday to demonstrate against the junta's decision to green-light a 800-megawatt coal plant on the coast of Krabi, a region renowned for its popular tropical beaches and steep limestone hills.
The gathering is a rare act of defiance of the junta's ban on public protests. Generals seized power in 2014 and have severely clamped down on dissent.
Junta spokesman Lieutenant General Sansern Kaewkamnerd said the trio were "invited for talks" because they did not ask for permission to protest.
"They must seek official permission beforehand and not just inform the media before holding a rally," he said in a statement.
Thailand's junta often describes periods of compulsory detention as being an invitation to talk.
Both the Save Krabi protest group and Suni Phasuk, a local researcher with Human Rights Watch, said the men had been taken to the 11th Army Circle, a barracks in Bangkok with a controversial reputation.
Detainees have previously accused authorities of physical abuse inside the facility while two men who allegedly improperly used their links to then Crown Prince and now King Maha Vajiralongkorn died in custody there.
"It reaffirms the ongoing repression of a military regime that strictly prohibits any form of dissent," Phasuk told AFP.
Thailand's south was a stronghold of the protest movements that pushed for the 2014 coup which brought the military to power and toppled their political rivals.
But some Krabi residents are now bristling at the junta for pushing through with the power station.
Thailand's southern beach regions are a comparatively wealthy part of the country but they suck up significant energy resources. Blackouts have become more common.
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