BANGKOK: Students piled bamboo canes and stationery in front of Thailand’s Ministry of Education and splashed crimson paint on it to protest corporal punishment, one of several protests that took place across the capital on Saturday.
The small demonstration to mark Teachers’ Day was staged by the "Bad Student" group, who have been part of an ongoing youth-led pro-democracy movement that has roiled the kingdom for six months.
The leaderless movement is largely united in its demands for an overhaul to Premier Prayut Chan-O-Cha’s government, and for reforms to the monarchy.
But some have also harnessed the protests to highlight their grievances with the status quo -- such as the treatment of various marginalised communities, and the education system.
Protest leader Lapanapat Wangpaisit said on Saturday the demonstrators wanted to use "Wai Kru Day", or Teachers’ Day, to show the "two sides" of Thailand’s education system.
"There’s a beautiful side and a dark side -- a side in which teachers hurt students," said Lapanapat.
"We want to let the ministry know and fix this problem."
Thailand’s ultra-conservative education system has long faced criticism for emphasizing rote learning, as well as its rigid rules.
Students face severe punishment and public humiliation if they are perceived to be disobedient.
The Bad Student group -- whose tactics have earned its members legal threats -- are calling for cultural change, a curriculum overhaul, and a relaxation of rules governing everything from hairstyles to skirt lengths.
On Saturday, a female student in a school uniform threw blood-red paint at the ministry’s entrance, which had rulers, scissors, and slender bamboo canes piled high in front of it.
Then she poured the paint on herself, saying it was symbolic of "students’ experience in school", and held up the three-finger salute -- a gesture the pro-democracy movement has borrowed from "The Hunger Games" film trilogy.
Earlier on Saturday, another group gathered at Bangkok’s Victory Monument to unfurl a 112-metre (370-foot) long banner criticising the kingdom’s draconian royal defamation law -- which shields Thailand’s monarchy from criticism and is referred to as section 112.
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