‘Rubber duck revolution’ takes off in Thailand
BANGKOK — Bangkok has been gripped by a rubber duck frenzy since pro-democracy protesters used giant inflatables to shield themselves from water cannon spray last month.
When police mounted a crackdown on a November rally, deploying tear gas and water cannon outside parliament, footage of demonstrators hiding behind giant ducks went viral.
Within days, duck-themed paraphernalia became a staple among street vendors at protests, the birds featuring on everything from hats to hair clips.
Protesters are calling for Prime Minister Prayut Chan-O-Cha to resign, a rewrite of the army-drafted constitution and for reforms to the monarchy — a taboo-smashing demand in a country where the ultra-wealthy royal family has long been untouchable.
The toy’s emergence as a protest symbol happened by accident. Protesters had intended to float on inflatable ducks down Bangkok’s Chao Phraya River behind parliament as lawmakers inside debated proposals for constitutional change.
Article continues after this advertisementBut since their redeployment as protection from tear gas and chemical-laced water fired from cannons, some demonstrators say the ducks have helped the pro-democracy movement win the PR war with authorities.
Article continues after this advertisement“To put it simply, they’re the guards of the people who use peaceful ways in protesting. We have cute ducks to fight against fully armed police, and it shows that we’re better,” said a 30-year-old protester named Sam.
Rattikarn Saehor, 39, sells duck bubble blowers from a stall and said her products help lighten the mood at rallies.
“We want the protest to be less stressful, full of creative ideas that show we truly like to protest with peace and do not want any violence to happen — so the ducks have helped make everything look lighter and softer,” she told AFP.
She said proceeds from her sales had supported volunteer medical teams at protests.
It is not the first time the bath-time buddies have been used as symbols of defiance and protest.
In 2013 Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman’s 16-metre inflatable duck sculpture floated in Hong Kong’s harbor but swiftly became mired in controversy.
A Weibo user edited a famous image from the 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown, replacing tanks with ducks prompting a Chinese government internet search ban on “big yellow duck”.
Giant inflatable rubber ducks featured in protests in Brazil in 2016 during a push to impeach then-president Dilma Rousseff and highlight the economic “quackery” of her government amid a downturn.
And they became a symbol of protest in Russia in 2017 when it emerged then prime minister Dmitry Medvedev had multiple luxury estates — including one that featured a special house for ducks on a pond.