Eight anti-coup protesters held in Thailand

Published June 23, 2014
Bangkok: An anti-coup protester held during a demonstration at a shopping mall here on Sunday.—AFP
Bangkok: An anti-coup protester held during a demonstration at a shopping mall here on Sunday.—AFP

BANGKOK: Police in Thailand arrested eight people on Sunday for demonstrating against the nation’s increasingly repressive military junta, including a man who was dragged away by undercover officers for reading a copy of George Orwell’s “Nineteen Eighty-Four” outside one of Bangkok’s most luxurious shopping malls.

The arrest was the first known case of anyone being detained for reading as a form of protest since the military seized power last month. Handfuls of anti-coup protesters have staged several silent readings of the classic book elsewhere in the capital in recent weeks because they say its indictment of totalitarianism has become relevant after the army deposed the nation’s elected government in a May 22 coup.

A police officer said all the arrests took place in and around Siam Paragon, a crowded, upscale mall in downtown Bangkok that’s one of Southeast Asia’s largest. It was the world’s most photographed location on Instagram last year. A Thai reporter who witnessed the lone man reading Orwell’s book said he was taken away by half a dozen plainclothes police. The reporter said the man first read the book quietly, then held it up as officers approached and journalists took photos.

When questioned, the man said he was reading the book for “liberty, equality and fraternity” — the slogan of the French Revolution. The man was also playing the French national anthem on his smartphone, the reporter said.

Several other people were also detained in the shopping mall’s food court for preparing to hand out sandwiches, mimicking another recent protest in which a small group of student activists from Bangkok’s Thammasat University gave out that said were “sandwiches for democracy.

“The eighth arrest Sunday was of a woman wearing a T-shirt with the words “Respect My Vote” on it.

The phrase became popular among pro-democracy groups trying to counter anti-government protesters who obstructed elections Feb 2 that were later annulled in a controversial court ruling.

Published in Dawn, June 23rd, 2014

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