Thai students held over ‘Hunger Games’ salute

Three students detained after raising a three-finger salute borrowed from film

Three Thai students detained after raising a three-finger salute borrowed from film to call for freedom of speech. Video: Reuters

Three Thai university students were taken into police custody for handing out free tickets to the latest film in the Hunger Games series, from which Thai protesters have borrowed a gesture of resistance to the country's totalitarian government.

Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha led a military coup in May and the military has quashed any public demonstration of resistance to the coup since then. A ban on political gatherings remains in place.

In the immediate aftermath of the coup, some protesters flashed a three-fingered salute inspired by Hunger Games series. The salute has become emblematic with Thai pro-democracy protesters, and the Thai government has warned the public against using it.

Two students  were arrested by police officers and security guards as they flashed anti-coup sign in front of Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha (back) while delivering a speech during his visit in Khon Kaen province, north eastern Thailand, yesterday. Photograph: EPA
Two students were arrested by police officers and security guards as they flashed anti-coup sign in front of Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha (back) while delivering a speech during his visit in Khon Kaen province, north eastern Thailand, yesterday. Photograph: EPA

“The three-finger sign is a sign to show that I am calling for my basic right to live my life,” Bangkok University student Natchacha Kongudom told reporters before being taken into custody after making the gesture outside a cinema.

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Police Colonel Visoot Chatchaidet told reporters that the students had not been arrested. “We are just inviting them to talk,” he said.

Natchacha is a supporter of the Thai Student Centre for Democracy (TSCD) which distributed over 100 tickets to watch the film at one Bangkok cinema. The cinema chain that owns that venue cancelled the screening and declined to comment on the reasons for the cancellation.

TSCD organisers said they were not staging a demonstration.

“There may be some hidden messages in the movie, but we are also a group that enjoys films,” TSCD organiser Ratthapol Supasopon told reporters before also being taken into custody.

The third detained student carried a copy of George Orwell’s novel 1984, which has also been deployed as a symbol of protest by those opposing Thailand’s military rule.

The detentions in Bangkok came the day after five members of a crowd were detained for making the salute and revealing an anti-coup slogan on their T-shirts as Mr Prayuth began a speech in the northern city of Khon Khaen. The city is a stronghold for supporters of the government Prayuth ousted.

Each of the five had one word on their shirts to make the message “We don’t support the coup”.

“It is all right, they do not understand the truth,” Mr Prayuth said on stage as he saw the demonstrators.

Reuters