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A screencap from the Rap Against Dictatorship video. Image: Rap Against Dictatorship/YouTube

Thai rappers’ rhymes rile military rulers as music video goes viral

  • The Rap Against Dictatorship collective dish out barbs about the military, corruption, censorship and lack of elections
Thailand

A group of Thai rappers has touched a nerve with an impassioned and now-viral music video in which they drop fiery rhymes about the ruling junta. Police are considering filing charges against the lyricists.

The generals that toppled Thailand’s government in 2014 have kept a tight lid on dissent but creative criticism through music and arts has been harder to control, although its effect has been minimal.

The song Prathet Ku Mee (Which is My Country), uploaded to YouTube on October 22, has racked up millions of views and tens of thousands of comments since it went live on the platform, prompting authorities to take notice.

“It’s under consideration by investigators and it will take a few days because it’s a sensitive issue,” said Siriwat Deephor, spokesman for the police’s Technology Crime Suppression Division when asked whether it would press charges.

A screencap from the Rap Against Dictatorship video. Image: Rap Against Dictatorship/YouTube

He also said the inquiry could decide whether those who share the video could be targeted.

“If this song violates the Computer Crime Act by uploading false information, those who share would be prosecuted and face the same punishment with those who uploaded it,” he said.

The act, which rights groups say has been used to crack down on online dissent, carries up to five years in prison.

Shot in black and white, the video features rappers from the Rap Against Dictatorship collective dishing out barbs about the military and blasting corruption, censorship and the lack of elections, which are tentatively scheduled for February after many delays.

A screencap from the Rap Against Dictatorship video. Image: Rap Against Dictatorship/YouTube

“The country where you must choose to suck truth or a bullet,” one rapper says, wearing sunglasses with a bandana wrapped around his mouth.

Several lyrics appear to go after junta leader Prayuth Chan-ocha.

“The country where the people do not read books, particularly the leader,” one verse says, a thinly veiled allusion to Prayuth, who has boasted about being widely read.

Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha sitting on Acer’s Predator Thronos Gaming Chair during the opening ceremony of the Thailand Game Show 2018 in Bangkok on October 26, 2018. Photo: Reuters

Straying into historically sensitive areas, a dummy made to look as if it has been lynched and strung up comes in and out of shot, a reference to the massacre of dozens of student protesters and civilians by security forces on a Bangkok campus in 1976.

The only colour appears on a guitar that is painted to resemble the Thai flag.

Journalists and an academic have joined the debate, with one person comparing it to rapper Childish Gambino’s macabre This is America video about racism and violence earlier this year.

But not everyone is a fan.

Screen capture from Childish Gambino’s ‘This is America’ video. Photo: YouTube

“Get out of this country if you don’t like it,” one Facebook user wrote.

Jacoboi, one of the group’s founders, said this week that those who appear in the video are artists who want to talk about politics.

“They are the things we heard people say on social media and in real life,” he said. “I’m not afraid of the authorities because I believe that nothing in this song has breached the law.”

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