Five Thai students held for 'Hunger Games' salute at PM
BBC | 19 November 2014
Five
Thai students who flashed a salute inspired by Hollywood film series
The Hunger Games at Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-Ocha have been detained.
The three-fingered salute was widely used by protesters against Thailand's military coup in May.
Gen Prayuth led the coup, which came after months of political deadlock and unrest, and became PM in August.
On Wednesday, he was speaking at an event in the
north-eastern province of Khon Kaen when five students from a local
university sitting near the podium stood up.
They removed their shirts to reveal T-shirts underneath with a
Thai slogan reading "No Coup", and flashed the three-fingered salute.
Police officers and soldiers immediately took the five away.
'Anyone else?'
The three-finger gesture is used by characters in the
dystopian Hunger Games film and book trilogy as a sign of silent dissent
against a brutal authoritarian state.
It became so popular after the Thai coup that the authorities
warned they would arrest anyone in a large group who gave the salute
and refused to lower their arm when ordered.
Local media reported that Mr Chan-ocha appeared unperturbed on
Wednesday and asked: "Does anyone else want to protest?" He added that
protesters could lodge complaints with local government offices.
Army officials later confirmed that the students were taken
to a military camp and were detained for "attitude adjustment", reported
The Nation.
Lawyer Sasinan Thamnithinan said they had not been charged, the Associated Press reports.
Anti-coup leaflets had reportedly been distributed around Khon Kaen province before Gen Prayuth's arrival.
The area is known to be a power base for former PM Thaksin
Shinawatra and his Pheu Thai party, whose supporters are known as "red
shirts".
The military has been heavily criticised for its ousting of the democratically-elected civilian government.
But it has argued that its 22 May coup was necessary to bring
peace and stability to Thailand, which saw violent clashes between red
shirts and the pro-monarchy opposition "yellow shirts" supporters.
Gen Prayuth became prime minister after he was named by a legislature hand-picked by the military.
Amnesty International has said the military government has
since engaged in widespread human rights violations, including arbitrary
detentions and a clampdown on free speech.
The military has said it eventually plans to hand power back
to civilians and promised to hold a general election in late 2015. But
international players have raised concerns of the junta consolidating
power in the meantime.
Ocha [អស្ចារ្យ in Khmer] deserves a three-fingered salute if you asked me!
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