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School life in Thailand: abuse, torture, hazing, deadly gang wars are rife

  • Thai student gangs fight with handguns, machetes, knives and even home-made grenades, often in broad daylight
  • Degrading and sometimes violent hazing is another widespread problem in Thai schools

Reading Time:5 minutes
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Hazing is widespread in Thailand. It is supposed to teach respect for elders, but is basically bullying. Photo: courtesy of Sotus

Kollawach Doklumjiak was on his way back from school in Bangkok when several teenagers wielding knives set upon him. They spotted him on the street and sprang into action.

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Kollawach was studying at a technical school, and for these youths from another school the mere sight of him was reason enough for an unprovoked attack. “They wanted to stab me,” recalls Kollawach, a soft-spoken, hulking young man in his twenties with frizzy hair, who is now studying political science at a university in the Thai capital. “They could have killed me.”

He escaped by jumping into one of the fetid canals that criss-cross the city. Reeking of putrid water, he sought refuge inside a Buddhist temple.

Monasteries, he says, are among the few places recognised as out of bounds by warring gangs of vocational school students, whose skirmishes often take place in broad daylight on Bangkok’s streets. They routinely use knives, machetes, handguns and home-made grenades.

Kollawach Doklumjiak, who went to vocational schools, escaped being stabbed by rival students by jumping into a filthy canal in Bangkok. Photo: Tibor Krausz
Kollawach Doklumjiak, who went to vocational schools, escaped being stabbed by rival students by jumping into a filthy canal in Bangkok. Photo: Tibor Krausz
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“Not even police stations are safe. There have been fights inside holding cells,” Kollawach says. “Officers may look the other way if they’re badly outnumbered.”

Usually groups of students gang up on their rivals in hit-and-run attacks, hoping to seize trophies from their victims, such as badges and belt buckles with a school’s insignia.

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