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Thai soldiers spray gunfire, tear gas at protest

AMBIKA AHUJA and GRANT PECK   04/12/09 11:39 PM ET   AP

Bangkok State Of Emergency

BANGKOK — Thai soldiers sprayed automatic weapons fire and threw tear gas to clear anti-government protesters from a major intersection in the capital in the pre-dawn darkness Monday, with at least 70 people reported injured. Demonstrators responded by hurling at least one gasoline bomb at a line of troops.

Monday's clash marked a major escalation in the ongoing protests that have roiled this southeast Asian nation. The skirmish came a day after the country's ousted prime minister called for a revolution.

While the government has declared a state of emergency, protesters controlled many streets in the capital Bangkok. They had earlier commandeered public buses and forced military vehicles to halt, in one case climbing on top of two armored personnel carriers, waving flags and shouting "Democracy."

A mob of the red-shirted protesters smashed cars carrying Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva and his aides on Sunday.

The red-shirted demonstrators are supporters of ousted former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra who want new elections, saying Abhisit's four-month-old government took power illegitimately. They also accuse the country's elite _ the military, judiciary and other unelected officials _ of undermining democracy by interfering in politics.

Parliament appointed Abhisit in December after a court ordered the removal of the previous pro-Thaksin government citing fraud in the 2007 elections. Thaksin supporters took to the streets in protest, and their numbers grew to 100,000 in Bangkok last week.

Monday's clash began between 4 a.m. and 5 a.m., as troops in full combat gear advanced to disperse the protesters, who were occupying a major junction, according to witnesses.

The soldiers fired hundreds of rounds from their M-16 automatic rifles, with Associated Press reporters saying most appeared to have been aimed over the heads of the protesters. The reporters saw protesters throw at least one gasoline bomb which exploded behind the army line and tear gas floated across the eerie dawn scene.

At the nearby Century Park Hotel, foreign tourists were seen rushing into taxis and heading for Bangkok's international airport.

Dr. Chatri Charoenchivakul of the Erawan Emergency Coordination Center said at least 70 people were injured, most of them from tear gas, while two soldiers and two civilians suffered from gunshot wounds.

Army spokesman Col. Sansern Kaewkamnerd said the protesters also used tear gas as well as "weapons" to open fire on the soldiers.

In another incident, the official Thai News Agency said three grenades, believed to be fired from an M-79 grenade launcher, landed inside the compound of the Constitutional Court. One exploded, causing minor damage, and the other two failed to explode, the report said.

Monday marked the beginning of the Thai New Year, normally the country's most joyous holiday. The Bangkok municipal government canceled all its festivities, but despite the rioting many Thais and foreign tourists began engaging in the ritualistic water throwing and general partying.

But in sharp contrast to the usual revelry, protesters set fires Monday morning that were still burning 1-1/2 hours later and retreated into side streets near the Din Daeng intersection, where there is an on-ramp to the main expressway leading north from the capital.

The clash appeared to be an isolated one, taking place several miles away from the main encampment of thousands of protesters outside the prime minister's offices.

Police Gen. Vichai Sangparpai said up to 30,000 demonstrators were scattered around the city. Police vans at some intersections were abandoned and looted. Protesters used buses to barricade several major roads.

Ousted prime minister Thaksin, regarded by most of the protesters as their leader, called for a revolution and said he might return from exile to lead it.

Thaksin fled the country last year, before a court convicted him in absentia of violating a conflict of interest law.

"Now that they have tanks on the streets, it is time for the people to come out in revolution. And when it is necessary, I will come back to the country," he said in a telephoned message to followers outside Abhisit's office.

The message was broadcast over a video link projected on giant screens and relayed on supporters' Internet sites.

Political tensions have simmered since Thaksin was ousted by a military coup in 2006 for alleged corruption and abuse of power. He remains popular in the impoverished countryside for his populist policies.

His opponents _ many in urban areas _ took to the streets last year to help bring down two pro-Thaksin governments, seizing Bangkok's two airports in November for about a week.

The emergency decree bans gatherings of more than five people, forbids news reports that threaten public order and allows the government to call up military troops to quell unrest.

Sansern, the army spokesman, said soldiers and police were being moved to more than 50 key points in the city, including bus and railway stations.

He said the military presence was not a sign of an imminent coup _ a common feature of Thai political history.

Protests were also reported in several provinces of northern and northeastern Thailand. The protests could prompt the military to intervene _ a high possibility in a country that has experienced 18 military coups since the 1930s.

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BANGKOK — Thai soldiers sprayed automatic weapons fire and threw tear gas to clear anti-government protesters from a major intersection in the capital in the pre-dawn darkness Monday, with at le...
BANGKOK — Thai soldiers sprayed automatic weapons fire and threw tear gas to clear anti-government protesters from a major intersection in the capital in the pre-dawn darkness Monday, with at le...
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07:30 AM on 04/13/2009
" spray ", such a nice word, so clean....honey pull out the Glade , the company is gone.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PlayTOE
Morals evolved due to cooperative group living
07:25 AM on 04/13/2009
It sounds like Thaksin Shinawatra was popular enough to still have public support even though he was corrupt.

This says a lot about the new government.

Time to stop the nonsense, protests, fighting, and military rule, and call a new election.
Thailand should be able to find someone to lead the country who is competent, future oriented, and not corrupt.
10:11 AM on 04/13/2009
They did have a new election, but the elites didn't like the result, so they accused the new government of election fraud, then paid protesters to shut down the airport.

The military culture there is pretty much loyal to the ones with power......
04:42 PM on 04/13/2009
The military culture is generally aligned with the democrat party and wholly loyal to the King.
06:39 AM on 04/13/2009
The problems in Thailand stem from the Palace and the military wanting to get rid of Thaksin and his very popular Thai Rak Thai party. They did that by accusing him of corruption and the courts banning the elected party. They formed a new party and still won the election. So the palace and the military not satisfied put in their own government.

Point One: The people in Thailand want the Govt that Thaksin Formed even now two years later.
Point Two: Thaksin was a taicoon long before he went in to politics
Point Three: He when Foreign Minister was the only one ever respected by the international community.
Point Four: The corruption allegations against him were fabricated and enforced by the same courts that banned the political party the people had just overwhelmingly chose.

Point Five: Thaksin and his government got into trouble because they were bringing in laws and negotiating Free Trade Agreements (ie with Japan) that severley hurt the profits of military and palace.

Point Six: Thaksin's popularity was and is so great that there is considerable jealousy within a segment of the royal family.

Thaksin and his government got into trouble for trying to be a non corrupt government. Hence their high popularity with Thais and the hatred he has from military and palace.
04:40 PM on 04/13/2009
As someone who has seen first hand people (mainly farmers and impoverished) being paid to vote for the thug Thaksin, you are very wrong!

I agree with you on the 6th point, but the rest are off.

Point One: The people want Thaksin in place because the think he will save them from impending debt. The fact is that since he made it easier to get loans and eased credit, their debt has tripled. ....they thought it was free money. Who benefited? Thaksin's friends in the banking sector, not the poor, except for the 20 to 500 baht they were given when paid off to vote for Thaksin and TRT.

Point Two: True...Thaksin is self made, and was the wealthiest man in Thailand when he entered politics.....which is how he manipulated the law so as not to pay taxes exceeding a billion dollars on the sale of his company ShinCorp to Singapore.

Point Three: True, however he was touting himself so much to be the next UN Secretary General, he soon realized how low on the international political ladder he really is.

Point Four: The allegations were never fabricated and as he continues to say he is not guilty, he won't come and prove it.....coward!

Point Five: The free trade agreements negotiated only benefited the rice millers and distributers: farmers still got the market price for rice, which is the main export to Japan, and thus never gained an extra baht for the commodity.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tommygun264
2Q2BSTR8
05:48 AM on 04/13/2009
Wow, the teabaggers in Thailand are hardcore.
07:31 AM on 04/13/2009
lolol
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tungsak
02:50 AM on 04/13/2009
These mobs are not fighting for DEMOCRACY! Anybody who bought that BS should have their brains checked out. The political turmoil that has been going on in Thailand for the past couple years started from the horrendous level of corruptions that went on during Thaksin reign. This man stops at nothing just to get his own way. Nepotism was skyhigh in Thaksin days and the way he did it, he pandering to the lowest of the low in societal class. He spent tax money and most of government budget on policy that ensured his base got free hand out through his numerous so call "government help" projects. You american definitely hates socialism if I get that right, do I? Imagine if Obama turns all your health care systems to socialism against your will overnight! That's what Thaksin did to Thai people. It seemed good in visage but it was not sustainable for a country the size of Thailand and it did turned bad, really bad. Later, just to throw eggs in Thai people faces, Thaksin deregulated health care policy so that he and his family can get the biggest piece of health care services system since the standard of public health care services had become so bad that anybody who could afford to pay to get in to private hospital decided it worth to avoid the predicament. .
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tungsak
02:53 AM on 04/13/2009
Guess what! only 2 years after he did all that, turned out Thaksin and his family had been buying up hospitals around country like hot cakes! That's just a drop in a barrel of evils Thaksin has caused this country. You have any idea how many lives he took in order to make him looked tough on crime Thousands of Lives were taken during his "War On Drug" policy and he did even tried to hide it that he encouraged the street execution for drug related alledged criminal. And the authority did take notice on that signal, thousands of alledged drug related criminal were executed with not even a charge filed against them. Imagine this happens in US and tell me you are OK with all this? And talk about corruptions, oh the big C word, let's just say when he got elected the first time he had a net worth of around 1 Billion US dollar but at around the time he got ousted 6 years later his assets skyrocketted to almost 11 billion US dollar all this in six years! you just tell me how in the world a political figure can make that shameless amount of money while in the office and claimed he was innocent of any corruption?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tungsak
02:54 AM on 04/13/2009
I don't have enough time to describe all the evils and feindish acts Thaksin has done but internet is certainly a bless if you don't mind doing some "real" research. This is not about a fight for democracy by the res hirts but it's a fight from Thaksin trying to get back his frozen money and his egotistical revenge. Almost all of the protester were either paid for to be in the mob, this is actually happenning in my neighborhood, there was this truck driven around yelling at people to dress in red and get on the truck to go to demonstrate for one thousand baht a day and promised not to have to take legal responsibilities for any action! or those people who lost their share of benefit from Thaksin day and they want back in. Have you seen how these red shirts operate, nothing short of criminal and mindless violences. And Thaksin actually encourage all these actions to be done to his "beloved" country. How patriotic was that to support violent acts against your own country just because you want it your way. That's Thaksin, classic Thaksin.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
CaddylackSprings
Citizen of Baggistan
03:08 AM on 04/13/2009
100,000 people in the street say your full of s h i t
01:46 AM on 04/13/2009
And Thaksin call for revolution from his London Penthouse "a man of the people" for sure,
He was ousted in a corruption scandal, that enriched his family and his cronies, when he fled Thailand he went to the UK and bought part of ~Man City football club??? for 100's of millions $ WTF? He wanted the Thai Gov. to invest Gov funds in a another club. The red shirts are over the line. and they are reaping what they sewed.
12:05 AM on 04/13/2009
As an Indonesian, I'm quite pleased that we turn out to be more mature in politics than it seems. We just passed the third election since Suharto, and it went by peacefully even though the commission for election is incompetent beyond description.

Several magazines have already praised Indonesian democracy, hailing us as the only functioning democracy in South East Asia. Moreover, we have freedom of the press that is not enjoyed by most Asian nations - not even South Korea. I am just glad that we don't have any monarchy distorting democracy like they do in Thailand.
11:56 PM on 04/12/2009
Next act in the play.

The King steps in.
05:51 AM on 04/13/2009
Dream on, If he moves at all it will be when the dust has settled,
11:30 PM on 04/12/2009
Abhisit Vejjajiva is just upset that demonstrators forced the 14th ASEAN summit on Saturday to be canceled.
10:20 PM on 04/12/2009
A country of so many with so little in terms of material wealth, the Thai people never cease to amaze me in their bravery, spirit and activism. Americans would do well to take lesson.

I wish all of the activists fighting the corrupt government strength and safety.
05:03 PM on 04/13/2009
Check facts: All the governments are most likely corrupt on some level, but Thaksin was the behemoth of corruption and did it right in the peoples faces. They were too busy standing in line at the banks to get loans as credit eased and debt tripled to notice this was happening.
10:19 PM on 04/12/2009
It is a very complicated situation, but if I was to sum it up in a nutshell it would be "elite protecting their privilege" It was not very long ago that the 'Yellow Shirts', backed by the elite, flouted the law with impunity and shut down the country's main airports, severely impacting the country's economy. The current PM Abhisit came to power on the back of their protests. Four months later none of the Yellow shirt leaders has been brought to justice. Now when the red shirts follow the same copybook the tanks and troops are sent in lickety-split, and there is blood in the streets. Hmm, can anyone say double standard?
05:05 PM on 04/13/2009
I would agree except for one thing....who is the military loyal to and why? Thaksin never gave the military any time of day and thus they disliked him....why be loyal to that faction?
10:17 PM on 04/12/2009
wow, i say the U.S. citizens should learn from this and do that to their government.
maybe we can still stop this ridiculous delusion idea of change and bailouts.
10:49 PM on 04/12/2009
You are seriously demented if you think rioting and mob rule are better than American-style democracy. If you really believe that, why don't you come over here for a vacation, right now.
-Atlas in Thailand
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
postman606
11:28 PM on 04/12/2009
Utterly absurd, there is no comparison to what has been going on in Thailand and the bailouts. You're side loss an election, deal with it and get ready for 2012. You people sound like a bunch of freaking babies.
10:16 PM on 04/12/2009
When you govern through fear it often turns to rage.
yappnmutt
humping legs for liberty
09:44 PM on 04/12/2009
the baht was too expensive anyhow.
09:41 PM on 04/12/2009
I'm not too familiar with Thai politics so I don't know which leader supports the ruling class.

Or better yet, which side USAID supports.

Can someone inform me.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
athenasword
wisdom is beautiful
10:16 PM on 04/12/2009
It's complicated.