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Thai Police Step Up Defense in Bangkok as Protests Continue | Thai Police Step Up Defense in Bangkok as Protests Continue |
(about 7 hours later) | |
BANGKOK — After a week of using soft-gloved tactics against antigovernment demonstrators, the Thai police aggressively stepped up their defense of government buildings in Bangkok on Monday, firing a hail of rubber bullets and tear gas and using water cannons. | |
Despite the police’s pressuring the thousands of protesters to go home as Thailand enters its peak tourism season, the main demonstration leader, Suthep Thaugsuban, dug in his heels, prolonging the grinding standoff, the nation’s deepest civil unrest in three years. | |
“We have to fight from every angle, fight until we win,” a weary-looking Mr. Suthep told thousands of supporters late Monday. A criminal court issued an arrest warrant for Mr. Suthep on charges of rebellion, which is punishable by death or life in prison. | |
Most of the Bangkok area, which has a population of about 10 million, remained calm Monday, and a vast majority of businesses here in the capital were open for most of the day, including shopping malls that had shut their doors as a precaution on Sunday. | |
But in areas targeted by protesters — particularly those around the prime minister’s office and the metropolitan police headquarters — clashes were intense. | |
Bloodied protesters, many of whom threw stones at police officers, were carried away from the those areas with injuries from rubber bullets apparently fired by the police. Two men had bullet wounds, doctors at a Bangkok hospital said. By late evening, as two trucks burned near the prime minister’s office, the government said that 98 people had been injured on Monday. | |
Amid the chaos, a deadline appeared to loom: Analysts said the protests could wind down very fast as the birthday of King Bhumibol Adulyadej approached. The monarch, who turns 86 on Thursday, is revered. | |
Protesters have set the ambitious — and, according to many analysts, unachievable — goal of ridding the country of the Shinawatras, the country’s most influential political family. | Protesters have set the ambitious — and, according to many analysts, unachievable — goal of ridding the country of the Shinawatras, the country’s most influential political family. |
Led by Thaksin Shinawatra, who was deposed as prime minister in a military coup in 2006 and now lives in exile, the family has spearheaded one of the most popular political movements in modern Thai history, winning every national election since 2001. Mr. Thaksin fled overseas in 2008, just before being convicted of abuse of power in a highly politicized trial. | |
The current prime minister, Yingluck Shinawatra, who is Mr. Thaksin’s sister, sounded both firm and conciliatory on Monday. | |
“The government is leaving open every option for discussion,” Ms. Yingluck said. But she rejected protesters’ demands for a “people’s council” of unelected representatives to replace the country’s parliamentary democracy. | |
The protesters’ proposal has been ridiculed by academics and openly questioned by some members of the opposition Democrat Party, who are allied with the protesters. | |
Ms. Yingluck was more diplomatic in rejecting the idea. | Ms. Yingluck was more diplomatic in rejecting the idea. |
“At this point, we don’t see how we can make it happen under this Constitution,” she said. | |
The European Union’s office in Thailand issued a statement late Monday saying it was “very concerned to see the occupation of public office buildings, television broadcasting stations and intimidation of the media.” | |
It added, “We believe that the response of the Thai authorities has so far been restrained and proportionate.” | |
The police said they would allow peaceful demonstrations to continue, including in the capital’s historic district, where tens of thousands of protesters have gathered for the past week. Crowds there have swollen in the evenings to create a carnival-like atmosphere, with demonstrators offering foot massages and free food. | The police said they would allow peaceful demonstrations to continue, including in the capital’s historic district, where tens of thousands of protesters have gathered for the past week. Crowds there have swollen in the evenings to create a carnival-like atmosphere, with demonstrators offering foot massages and free food. |
But the police said they would vigorously defend important government buildings from the protesters, who announced over the weekend that they planned to seize additional buildings, having already occupied the Finance Ministry and a large government complex last week. | |
Demonstrators spent Sunday and Monday dismantling razor wire and pushing over dozens of concrete barriers erected by the police to protect the prime minister’s office. | |
“I would like to urge your cooperation in not attempting to invade the area behind the barriers,” Lt. Col. Anchulee Thirawongpaisal of the police said Monday in a televised news media briefing. | |
Journalists using miniature drones mounted with cameras — an innovation not widely used in the many previous bouts of unrest in Thailand — circulated videos of the battles between a thin line of riot police officers protecting the prime minister’s office and protesters attacking the barricades. | |
Protests reached a climax over the weekend when a group of students allied with the antigovernment demonstrators clashed with the government supporters known as red shirts. Shootings between the two groups left at least three people dead and dozens injured. | |
As of late Monday, the government reported that the total number of people injured since Friday had risen to 201. | |
The protesters are divided into disparate factions. Some are allied with the Democrat Party, the oldest political party in Thailand, which broke with tradition this year and joined street protests. | |
Others come from an ascetic Buddhist sect, vocational schools and an ultramonarchist grouping known as the yellow shirts. | Others come from an ascetic Buddhist sect, vocational schools and an ultramonarchist grouping known as the yellow shirts. |
Despite the appearance of normalcy in much of Bangkok, more than a dozen secondary schools, at least seven large universities and the United Nations regional headquarters were closed on Monday. | |
The protests were set off by the government’s effort to push through an amnesty that would have broadly applied to any politics-related cases since 2004. Critics said it would help ease Mr. Thaksin’s return to Thailand by wiping clean pending corruption cases against him and voiding his conviction. The government withdrew the amnesty bill last month after a public outcry, but Mr. Suthep, the protest leader, expanded protesters’ demands to include the elimination of what they call the “Thaksin regime.” | |
Poypiti Amatatham contributed reporting. | Poypiti Amatatham contributed reporting. |