Natthapan Saengtab: Leading the fight for land rights in Southern Thailand Published: 9 February 2022 Photo story At the age of 18, Natthapan Saengtab crashed her motorcycle into a stranger's car. It set off a chain of events that would see her parents lose their land, sending the family on a downward spiral. But against all odds, the fateful accident set Natthapan on the path to becoming a prominent land rights defender in southern Thailand.
Thailand’s Alisa Bintuna: Believing in the young generation’s power to change the world Published: 9 February 2022 Photo story Alisa, who goes by the nickname Fon, went to a high school located right at the beach, prompting her to develop a deep interest in the coastal communities of her hometown. She then became inspired to pursue a career in law, hoping to bring the voices of local communities into the country's environmental laws and regulations. Today, the young activist is one of the pioneers of encouraging young people in Thailand's South to raise their voices for change. She became one of the few youth representatives in national politics dedicated to community struggles in the country’s coastal areas. By Wanpen Pajai and Luke Duggleby
Songseang Supanya: A rising voice of empowerment for the slums of Bangkok Published: 9 February 2022 Photo story Until the second grade, Songseang Supanya did not see a problem with commuting to school in a saleng, a three-wheeled cart her parents used for scavenging in the streets of Bangkok. Then, in third grade, she switched to a school van, supervised every morning by teachers. "One day, I overheard a teacher talk about picking me up from home. 'She lives in a slum!' she said. I felt terrible. I questioned whether living in a slum meant I was not a [good] student," Songeang recalls. By Siyoree (Joyce) Thaitrakulpanich and Luke Duggleby
Transformation or stagnation? How digital media is changing student activism in Indonesia Published: 9 February 2022 Analysis Indonesia, like its neighbouring countries in Southeast Asia, has a long history of student activism; from the participation of indigenous and Islamic students to end Dutch colonial rule and a wave of protests in the 1970s against corruption, student movements became a strong force in Indonesia’s democracy. With the changing landscape of technology has also come a shift in how students and youth in Indonesia become politically engaged. By Renee Karunungan
Seeking Justice: How Yureesa Sama builds peace through dialogue in the Deep South Published: 9 February 2022 Photo story Yureesa Sama was a high-school student when the police officers showed up at her doorstep for the first time in 2010. Her family lived in a small house surrounded by rice paddies in a Malay-Muslim community in Pattani province in Thailand's Deep South. The officers questioned her parents, family members and neighbours. Then they left, only to return the following week, the one after that and so on. Sometimes they just hung around the house for hours watching who came and went. Yureesa sensed her parents' concern and knew something was wrong, but she didn't quite understand what was going on. Finally, she was told not to worry and focus on her studies. In most other places in Thailand, the officers' conduct would have raised eyebrows, but the Deep South has been ruled by martial law since 2005. Growing up in a region affected by a prolonged separatist insurgency, Yureesa was taught not to ask too many questions. By Paritta (Mai) Wangkiat and Luke Duggleby
Youth & democracy: 5 poems Published: 15 December 2021 Poem The prose of Indian poet Haripriya Soibam describes youth's struggle to preserve and promote democracy. Read her five poems for "Young voices on the rise - Youth and democracy in the Asia-Pacific region". By Dr Soibam Haripriya
Khairiyah Rahmanyah: The fisherfolk’s daughter who defends the ocean in Southern Thailand Published: 15 December 2021 Photo story Sitting in front of Songkhla’s city hall, a seaside city in southern Thailand, a young woman dressed in a hijab wrote a letter to the country's prime minister. Choosing each word with care, she called on him "to listen to the stories of the fisherfolk’s children who grew up and bonded with the sea, protected and took care of it." It was in May 2020, two days before a week-long public hearing session for the Chana Industrial Estate project that is poised to transform the quiet fishing villages of Songkhla province into an industrial zone. By Wanpen Pajai and Luke Duggleby
Nalutporn Krairiksh: The journalist challenging Thai society to see people with disabilities as equally human Published: 15 December 2021 Photo essay At the age of nine, Nalutporn was diagnosed with spinal muscular atrophy. For the rest of her life, she would use a wheelchair – and for the first part of that life, she had to make it through the Thai educational system. People with disabilities in Thailand have few rights sanctioned – a hot political issue for Nalutporn. By Asaree (Mind) Thaitrakulpanich and Luke Duggleby
Patchara Kumchumnan, passionate indigenous rights defender behind the #SaveBangKloi campaign Published: 15 December 2021 Photo story Homophobia, prejudice and hatred marked Patchara Kumchumnan's childhood. It's taken him a few years and some hundred kilometres to escape the prejudice and hatred in his hometown. But, while the scar of discrimination never faded completely, the experience became his driving force to defend the rights of others. By Nanticha (Lynn) Ocharoenchai and Luke Duggleby
Thai artist Tada Hengsapkul dredges up history the government wants hidden Published: 15 December 2021 Photo story One of the most radical political artists in the Thai scene, 34-year-old Tada Hengsapkul ties together nationalism, often-ugly politics, and the bruises of the Cold War in provocative, thought-provoking art. In the current political climate where police violence against pro-democracy protesters has been increasingly rampant, his past works still ring true. By Asaree (Mind) Thaitrakulpanich and Luke Duggleby