"Don't tell me how to dress." It's a new rallying cry for Thai women and the start of a #MeToo movement all their own.
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00:00There was some local authorities who came out in a newspaper article warning women,
00:15advising them not to dress sexily or too revealing so as to avoid sexual assault.
00:21It hit a nerve with me and I had to say something.
00:34I was not dressed in any revealing manner, in fact I had a baggy t-shirt on and three
00:41quarter length jeans, yet it still happened to me.
00:44As does almost 60% of women during this time get harassed or assaulted in some way.
00:50This happens to way too many women and it needs to stop.
01:04The reason I think that Me Too hasn't taken off quite so quickly in Thailand and that
01:11Don't Tell Me How To Dress has, is that it's less confrontational, which if you know Thai
01:18people and you know Thai culture, we are not quick to point fingers at any one particular
01:25person.
01:26Perhaps this is a good entry point into the bigger Me Too movement or it's our Thai version
01:32of Me Too.
01:42You know you are not to blame and please don't think that it is your fault or what
01:50you were wearing or how you were behaving.
02:01I hope that in some small way this campaign can provide a platform for you to come forth
02:06and tell your story when you are ready and that it is a way for all of us to look out
02:13for one another and stand up for our rights and stand up for each other and send a message
02:20to the perpetrators out there who think that they can take advantage of women, that we
02:26are not going to stand for it.