To Punish Thai Police, a Hello Kitty Armband Top of Form
By SETH MYDANS
August 7, 2007
A
police officer in
No
matter how many ribbons for valor a Thai officer may wear, if he parks in the
wrong place, or shows up late for work, or is seen dropping a bit of litter on
the sidewalk, he can be ordered to wear the insignia.
“Simple
warnings no longer work,” said Pongpat Chayaphan, acting chief of the Crime
Suppression Division in
“This
new twist is expected to make them feel guilt and shame and prevent them from
repeating the offense, no matter how minor,” he said. “Kitty is a cute icon for
young girls. It’s not something macho police officers want covering their
biceps.”
Ten
of the armbands have been prepared, but so far none have actually been issued,
according to an officer who declined to give his name while discussing this
sensitive topic.
“After
this policy came out, the police are scared,” the officer said. “It will be
very embarrassing to walk around with Hello Kitty on your arm.” It is a step
down from the Crime Suppression Division’s official motto: “When you have no
one to turn to, come to us.”
Mr.
Pongpat, who has trained with the American Secret Service and the Canadian
police, was promoted to head the division three months ago and says he wants to
modernize his force, “even though we lack the highest technology, equipment and
mind-set.”
An
aide, Maj. Weeraprach Wonrat,
said the chief was a believer in behavioral science and in the “broken window
theory,” which holds that small changes can have large effects.
Pink
armbands for misdemeanors are a start. Stronger measures could be next for
corruption and extrajudicial killings.
An
early experiment using armbands was not encouraging. Mr. Pongpat first tried
using plaid ones. But instead of feeling shame, Major Weeraprach
said, the officers took them home as souvenirs. The force still has only one of
the ten it originally issued.
After
that misfire, police commanders met again to consider strategy, he said, and
agreed that Hello Kitty might work where tartan had failed.
So
far, he said, there is no fallback plan. The department has not yet decided what
punishment to impose if officers make off with their pink armbands as well.