糖心Vlog

Ejection of union president spotlights Thai generational divide

Netiwit Chotiphatphaisal accused of disrespect towards administrators and monarchy

Published on
March 7, 2022
Last updated
March 7, 2022
Ramayana mural paintings, Thailand
Source: iStock
Ramayana mural paintings, Thailand

Students are in uproar after a聽prominent Thai institution said it聽would remove the president of its students鈥 union for聽inviting anti-monarchy speakers to聽one of its events.

A year ago, 25-year-old Netiwit Chotiphatphaisal won the presidency of his students鈥 union in a landslide, garnering more than 10,000 of聽roughly 14,000 votes. Now, Chulalongkorn University, the oldest higher education institution in聽Thailand, is聽forcing him out of聽his post.

The decision has prompted statements of support for the students鈥 union leader among dozens of Thai student groups, but the issue itself goes beyond campuses. It聽illustrates a growing fissure playing out across the country between its conservative elite and the younger generation, recently emboldened to dissent.

Thailand experienced upheaval as recently as 2014, when its military overthrew an elected government for the second time in a聽decade. In the years since, students have become an active presence in politics, staging mass protests against the Thai monarchy and military. But academia 鈥 and society 鈥 has been slower to聽change.

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In July 2021, Mr Chotiphatphaisal invited Thai activists to speak at an online freshers鈥 orientation, and one of聽them made an obscene hand gesture to administrators. The gesture and the choice of speakers were not well received.

The university claims that Mr Chotiphatphaisal disrespected Thai culture, but he stood by the move. 鈥淲hen you think about freshman [induction] ceremonies in Thailand, you think of old people who say things about nostalgia and their own days at university, or something that鈥檚 not very relevant to student lives,鈥 he said.

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This is not the first time he has courted controversy. In 2017, when he was a fresher himself, he was removed as chair of the student council after he led a walkout by eight students from the university event where learners typically bow before the statue of Thailand鈥檚 King聽Rama聽V 鈥 a聽decision that made headlines across the country.

Mr Chotiphatphaisal still bristled at the 鈥渉umiliation of prostrating鈥 before the king. 鈥淲e want to say he鈥檚 also human, not a聽celestial being that you cannot criticise,鈥 he said.

But these moves have not gained him popularity with those in the university administration, which is moving to deduct his merit points. In a system that dates back to the 1980s, every Thai student is given an allotment of points when they start university; the points can be deducted for various infractions, from breaking the dress code to disrespecting faculty. Students need more than 80聽points to hold office.

While the administration may succeed in removing the outspoken students鈥 union head, Mr Chotiphatphaisal and his supporters said the move reflected poorly on the university.

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An administrator who spoke with 糖心Vlog on condition of anonymity said the university鈥檚 actions revealed its 鈥渢rue position鈥 on freedom of speech, which 鈥渞uns counter to its efforts to become one of the world鈥檚 leading universities鈥.

鈥淔urthermore, it demonstrates that the administrators lag far behind the students鈥 expectations and worldview,鈥 they said, adding that since the coup in 2014, the university has prohibited all political academic panels and student activities.

鈥淭he administrators should stay out of students鈥 affairs and focus on promoting academic quality. The only thing a university should do for its students is provide them with knowledge and a learning environment,鈥 the administrator said.

As for Mr Chotiphatphaisal, he may be stepping down, but he is not about to leave quietly.

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鈥淎lthough I聽am no longer in the office鈥聽still support fully many kinds of freedom of expression, including freedom to disagree, freedom of satire, and freedom to offend, [including] giving [them the] middle finger,鈥 he said.

pola.lem@timeshighereducation.com

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