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Thai police fire tear gas in clash with hundreds of protesters

Da Ji

Alfrescian
Loyal

Thai police fire tear gas in clash with hundreds of protesters


REUTERS

FIRST POSTED: SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2012 02:21 PM EST | UPDATED: SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2012 02:35 PM EST

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Anti-government protesters wear swimming goggles for protection against tear gas as they face police near the Government house in Bangkok November 24, 2012. Thai police fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of anti-government protesters who pushed through barriers and clashed with security forces on Saturday as thousands gathered seeking to overthrow Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra's government. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj

BANGKOK - Thai police fired tear gas in clashes with hundreds of protesters in Bangkok on Saturday ahead of a rally seeking to overthrow the government of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra in the largest demonstration yet against her administration.

The protest highlights tensions that have been simmering since Yingluck’s Puea Thai party swept to victory in July 2011 and could herald another period of unrest in Thailand.

Anti-riot police wielding plastic shields fired gas canisters at protesters who tried to climb over cement and barbed wire barriers blocking entry to the rally site. Police said “between 300 and 400 protesters” clashed with police.

At least seven police were wounded and up to 132 protesters arrested in the clash near the United Nations headquarters in Bangkok, a stone’s throw away from the main rally site.

Pitak Siam, a new anti-government group, has attracted the support of various royalist groups including “yellow shirt” members of the People’s Alliance for Democracy (PAD) who helped destabilize governments either led or backed by former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, Yingluck’s brother, in 2006 and 2008.

Authorities have deployed 17,000 police at the rally site and the government has invoked the Internal Security Act allowing police to detain protesters and carry out security checks and set up roadblocks.

Police say they have seized various weapons, including knives and bullets, as protesters arrived at the protest area.

“We used tear gas because protesters were blocking police and did not comply with the security measures we put in place,” police spokesman Piya Uthaya told a local TV station.

Thailand has seen frequent bloody street protests in recent years including a rally that lasted more than two months by supporters of the present government in 2010.

Those protests sparked a military crackdown that left at least 91 people dead and more than 1,700 injured.

The royalist Pitak Siam group, led by retired military general Boonlert Kaewprasit, accused Yingluck’s government of corruption and being a puppet of former premier Thaksin.

Thaksin remains a deeply divisive figure in Thailand. He was ousted in a 2006 military-backed coup and fled the country in 2008 shortly before being found guilty of abuse of power.

“I’m telling Thaksin that if he wants to return to Thailand he needs to bow before the king and serve his prison sentence,” Boonlert told the thousands of protesters at the rally site.

Some held pictures of Thailand’s revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej as Boonlert shouted “Yingluck, get out!” to cheers of his supporters.

Thailand has seen a series of political protests since 2006 with pro-Thaksin and anti-Thaksin groups taking turns to challenge various administrations’ right to rule.
 

Joe Higashi

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset

Protest abandoned as police step in

Date November 26, 2012

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Protests … a Buddhist monk wears a mask as a protection against tear gas. Photo: AFP

BANGKOK: The organiser of an anti-government rally in Bangkok has quit his protest movement after an eight-hour rally left 61 people injured, 137 arrested and drew a lower than expected turnout.

''I have lost to evil,'' said retired army general Boonlert Kaewprasit, who earlier had called on the army to stage a coup to oust the Thai government.

Authorities had stopped many people who wanted to protest from reaching the rally on Saturday, said Mr Boonlert.

Police put the number of protesters at about 10,000 but many of them left as police twice fired tear gas to disperse crowds. This was far short of Mr Boonlert's hope of one million.

Violence erupted when some protesters demanded police open wire and concrete barricades to reach the rally at Bangkok's historic Royal Plaza, near parliament house. Police had instructed them to take another route to the area where they had set up checkpoints. Police claimed protesters had attacked them with flagpoles and had edged trucks into police lines, injuring several.

The protest showed that simmering political tensions remain in Thailand after a coup that ousted the government of Thaksin Shinawatra in 2006. Mr Thaksin, who remains a divisive figure in Thai politics , is living in exile to avoid a two-year jail sentence for corruption.

Saturday's rally was the biggest since Mr Thaksin's younger sister Yingluck Shinawatra was swept into power at national elections in July last year.

Ms Yingluck had warned that Mr Boonlert's royalist Pitak Siam (Protect Thailand) movement was trying to overthrow the government and invoked a special security law to give security forces more power to deal with trouble.

Pitak Siam is linked to the ''Yellow Shirt'' movement that occupied Bangkok's international airport for a week in 2008. Political tensions remain high as opposition parties are due to debate a non-confidence motion against the government this week.
 
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