Twitter rolls out 'Milk Tea Alliance' emoji as movement gains momentum

Milk Tea Alliance is a global online pro-democracy movement that has united anti-Beijing campaigners in Hong Kong and Taiwan

By
Reuters
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File photo of a Twitter logo.
  • Twitter on Thursday introduced an emoji for the Milk Tea Alliance.
  • Milk Tea Alliance is a global online pro-democracy movement that has united anti-Beijing campaigners in Hong Kong and Taiwan.
  • Activists welcome the announcement of the emoji for the first anniversary of the movement.


Twitter on Thursday introduced an emoji - a white cup set against a background of three colours representing different shades of milk tea in Thailand, Hong Kong, and Taiwan - for the Milk Tea Alliance.

Milk Tea Alliance is a global online pro-democracy movement that has united anti-Beijing campaigners in Hong Kong and Taiwan with protesters in Thailand, Myanmar, and beyond.

Activists welcomed the announcement of the emoji for the first anniversary of the movement.

The Milk Tea Alliance sprang from a Twitter war that flared after Chinese nationalists accused a young Thai actor and his girlfriend of supporting democracy in Hong Kong and Taiwanese independence.

It is named after a shared passion for sweet tea drinks in the three places.

Use of the hashtag peaked again in February after the military coup in Myanmar, where protesters using the hashtag rallied regional support.

“We have seen more than 11 million Tweets featuring the #MilkTeaAlliance hashtag over the past year,” Twitter said in an announcement that pushed the hashtag to among the top trending in Thailand, Hong Kong, and Taiwan on Thursday.

Previously, Twitter launched emojis for #MeToo and #BlackLivesMatter movements.

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The Twitter emoji showed global recognition and lent greater credibility to the youth movement, said prominent Thai activist Netiwit Chotiphatphaisal, one of the alliance’s leading voices.

“It’s important as it shows the young people fighting for a democracy that the world is with them and they’re making an impact,” Netiwit told Reuters. “It’s a sign that online activism can go much further.”

Twitter is blocked in China and its apparent endorsement of a movement with a strong current of opposition to Beijing was unlikely to hurt its business, said James Buchanan, a lecturer at Bangkok’s Mahidol University International College.

“Twitter has plenty to gain by appealing to young people in the Asian markets that are open to them,” he said.