"We are investigating where the stickers came from and who did this," said Colonel Somporn Daengdee, deputy chief of the police's Technology Crime Suppression Division.
He declined to say more due to the sensitivity of the issue.
Line, which is one of Thailand's most popular social media platforms, apologized for the set of cartoon stickers and said it was no longer available to purchase. The stickers had spread quickly online on Wednesday.
"LINE Corporation is aware of the culturally sensitive sticker set that may have caused discomfort among our users in Thailand," Line said in a statement posted online. "The sticker set in question has been pulled from the LINE Sticker Shop.
King Bhumibol Adulyadej, 88, is a revered figure in Thailand. The king has been staying at a Bangkok hospital since May 2015 and worries over his health and the succession has formed the backdrop to more than a decade of political crisis in Thailand.
News about the king's health is tightly controlled by the palace which issues statements detailing his ailments.
Public debate about the monarchy is curtailed by the lese-majeste laws.
Those found guilty of breaking the royal insult laws face
up to 15 years in prison. Rights groups say the law is often abused,
contributing significantly to the deterioration of Thailand's rights
record.
LINE
allows users to compose their own stickers and sell them online. Many
users include cartoon-like stickers in their messages.
Users can create and upload stickers which are checked by
head office in Japan and not in Thailand, said an employee at LINE in
Thailand who declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the
matter.
(Reporting by Panarat Thepgumpanat and Amy Sawitta Lefevre; Writing by Simon Webb; Editing by Robert Birsel)
Culled from Reuters
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