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BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTING!

SIFU

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Re: Thai Red Shirt Protest Bangkok 2010

not desperate meh.. everyday sinkie complaining here, FT takes away our job lah, this and that lah.. wah lou.. talk so much, then do nothing..

CB kia tonychat,

u r desperate enough to marry a ladyboy for a wife. prostitute somemore leh.

u r also desperate enough to borrow $ from your amry fren. somemore never return.

:oIo::oIo: pathetic thailand OKT.:oIo:
 

postnew

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Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

Apr 8, 2010
Thailand situation 'worrying'

HANOI - SINGAPORE said on Thursday that the situation in Thailand, where a state of emergency has been declared over anti-government protests, is 'worrying' and that it hopes violence will not erupt.

Thailand's Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva was forced to cancel his trip to the Vietnamese capital Hanoi for a South-east Asian summit, after a dramatic escalation in more than three weeks of rolling demonstrations.
images

'The situation in Bangkok is worrying and it's a sombre backdrop to our discussions,' said Foreign Minister George Yeo.

'(I) really hope that the situation there will not lead to violence, that good sense will prevail, and that the parties involved will continue to talk,' he told reporters on the sidelines of the summit. Thailand's neighbours were philosophical about Mr Abhisit's inability to attend the two-day Association of South-east Asian Nations (Asean) summit due to open later on Thursday.

'Our first responsibility must be to our own people,' Mr Yeo said, adding he had no doubt that regional leaders 'fully understand' his decision.

Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa said the cancellation was 'not the end of the world'. 'At the same time, Indonesia is certainly following closely the developments in Thailand with the hope that normalcy could be restored,' he said. -- AFP
 

kensington

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Re: Thai Red Shirt Protest Bangkok 2010

:oIo:


tsro_add01.gif

If RED-SHIRTED citizen dies, the king should be responsible...
(thar prachachon ser daeng tai, nai luang torng rab phit chorp)




The conflict today is partly the result of the atrocious media, especially TV. The government's "interference" is not the only reason to blame. It is bad enough that the government have the full control of one TV channel with outcries only from a fraction of media professionals and none from media professional bodies.


The MSM is to blame for all these fucking mess they created from their bias reporting running with the devil will not always pays off and every pro govt papers repoerters are going to be fair game to those oppressed REDS. Watch out !!! Burning some cars were just the prelude of more to come.

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เสื้อแดง ตลอดไป


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The Thai government is restricting and closing down most of the anti-govt websites.
The webmaster of pro UDD site,http://www.norporchorusa.com/index.php?option=com_rsgallery2&Itemid=69 has been arrrested and charged with lese majeste.

Please share any mirror sites that any of us here know about. Thank you.


watermark_npcusa_grey2.png
 

kensington

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Re: Thai Red Shirt Protest Bangkok 2010

BANGKOK, April 8 (AP) - (Kyodo)—(EDS: UPDATING WITH ATTACKS)

Thai authorities, shortly after two attacks on government-linked organizations, blacked out a satellite television broadcast Thursday by antigovernment protesters staging street campaigns against the coalition government led by Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva.

The protesters want parliament dissolved and an election called.

The authorities also blocked Internet access to web-based broadcasts connected with People Channel, the protester's TV station that has televised all the protests in central Bangkok.

Earlier Thursday, grenade attacks wounded one policeman and damaged buildings of a political party and a petrochemical firm in two districts in Bangkok.

Both premises belong to opponents of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra whose supporters have been staging marathon street protests in central Bangkok since March 12.

The wounded policeman was among security personnel deployed to guard the head office of the New Politics Party, founded last year by core leaders of the People's Alliance for Democracy, a group that conducted six months of protests, including shutting down two Bangkok airports for about a week, to topple two elected governments led by Thaksin allies in 2008.

Shells from M-79 grenade launchers and M-16 assault rifles were found on the ground and in a room on the second floor of the party building. The building entrance was also damaged by bullets.

Security forces said two assailants attacked the building from a motorbike.

An hour later, the headquarters of TPI Polene Public Co. was attacked by two gunmen on a motorbike.

The building was slightly damaged by bullets and an unexploded grenade and a shell from an assault rifle were found near the building, according to police.

TPI Polene is petrochemical firm founded by Prachai Leophairatana, a former senator and a controversial Thai businessman who has reportedly donated money to the ruling Democrat Party.

Prachai is also a Thaksin critic.

Early Wednesday morning, an office of the Army Commander-in-Chief on sixth floor of army headquarters in central Bangkok was damaged in an M-79 attack.

One soldier was wounded.

The threat of violence has worried Bangkok residents as a series of grenade attacks have wounded soldiers and civilians and damaged state and private property in recent weeks.

On Wednesday evening, Abhisit's government invoked an emergency decree covering Bangkok and suburban areas to cope with protesters refusing to disperse from Bangkok's prime business and shopping areas.

The protest leaders, via live broadcast, were calling for more supporters from all over the country to march into Bangkok to topple the military-backed Abhisit government.

Fewer than 1,000 protesters were seen early Thursday around the Ratchaprasong intersection where all posh shopping malls and luxury hotels have been forced to close for a sixth straight day.

Some 25,000 protesters had been there until late Wednesday night.

At another protest site near Government House, several thousand protesters remained encamped along the road leading to the Democracy Monument.

Despite the tougher law being imposed, Abhisit's government reiterated it has no plan to disperse the protesters by force.

Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban, who is to lead the emergency operation command, said late Wednesday there is "no intention to crack down on the people."

The ongoing political turbulence prompted Abhisit to cancel his trip to Hanoi where leaders of the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations are to have annual summit talks. Deputy Prime Minister Trairong Suwannakhiri will represent the Thai leader instead.


http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D9EUNGB80&show_article=1
 

kensington

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Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

P201004081419537575181732.jpg

Arisman Pongruangrong (C), one of the leaders of Thailand's red-shirted protesters, speaks at a rally inside the Parliament House compound in Bangkok, capital of Thailand, April 7, 2010. Hundreds of anti-government protesters besieged the Parliament House for hours Wednesday and stormed into the compound before they withdrew and dispersed upon their leader's request. (Xinhua/Shi Xianzhen)



Thailand's Prime Minsiter Abhisit Vejjajiva Thursday morning abruptly canceled his trip to Hanoi for ASEAN Summit, and Deputy Prime Minister Trairong Suwankhiri will attend the meetings on his behalf, the Thai News Agency reported.

Earlier the Channel 7 reported Foreign Minister Kasit Piromya, who has been in the Vietnamese capital of Hanoi for the ASEAN ministerial meetings, will be on Ahbisit's behalf.

The cancellation was announced one day after Abhisit declared a state of emergency in Bangkok and some areas of the neighboring five provinces Wednesday afternoon to deal with the ongoing anti- government rally by "red-shirts".

According to the previous arrangement, Abhisit would leave Bangkok for Vietnam Thursday to attend the first day of the ASEAN Summit and return to Bangkok the same day, and Friday he would go to Vietnam again for the second day's meeting.

Source: Xinhua


The much-loved Arisman before he became a political beast...:biggrin:
The desire to right those wrongs must have burnt a big hole in his conscience
to take up the fight on behalf of his poorer rural cousins...
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Abhisit cancelled his trip because he is afraid of what happened to Thaksin will happen to him as well...errr....like being deposed while he is away and being prevented from coming home ???
In Thailand, lightnings has the tendencies of striking at the same spot many times over, hahahaha....:biggrin:
 

kensington

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Thai unrest hovers over Southeast Asian summit


Unrest in Thailand and controversy over Myanmar's elections are likely to overshadow a summit of 10 Southeast Asian leaders who had intended to focus on economic matters.

The summit was set to open in Hanoi on Thursday, one day after Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva declared a state of emergency in the face of escalating anti-government protests. At the last minute, he canceled his participation in the 16th annual summit of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.

"The situation in Bangkok is worrying, and it's a somber backdrop to our discussions," Singaporean Foreign Minister George Yeo said. "I really hope that the situation there will not lead to violence."

Leaders from the 10 ASEAN nations were expected to focus on economic integration and climate change.

Some members are likely to press privately for a statement urging Myanmar's military junta to modify new laws governing the elections, which the largest opposition group plans to boycott.

Myanmar's junta plans to call elections sometime this year, but under the election laws, detained pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi is forbidden from participating.

Last week, members of her party, the National League for Democracy, announced they would not participate in the polls, the first in 20 years.

"It's disappointing that, because of the way the election laws have been crafted, it's not possible for the NLD to participate in the elections," Yeo said, speaking to reporters on the sidelines of the meeting Thursday morning.

However, he said, it was unlikely that the group would strongly criticize Myanmar's junta.

"We are not in a position to punish Myanmar," Yeo said. "If China and India remain engaged with Myanmar, then we have to."

ASEAN has a tradition of noninterference in its members' political affairs, so a strong public rebuke is unlikely. Political consensus is also difficult to reach among the 10 nations, which include a military junta, communist states and democracies.

The leaders also plan to issue a statement about climate change, but the focus is likely to be on economics, said Carl Thayer, a Vietnam specialist at the Australian National Defence Force Academy.

ASEAN hopes to advance its goals of forming a European-style economic community by 2015 and promoting development across the region.

At the last ASEAN summit, held in Thailand, the group agreed on ways to deal with the global economic crisis. With the regional outlook beginning to improve, they may decide to remove steps taken previously to stimulate the regional economy.

Last year's summit was disrupted by political protesters known as the "Red Shirts," who demanded the resignation of Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva. Some visiting leaders had to be airlifted out by helicopter.

That same anti-government protest movement launched a new wave of rallies in the Thai capital in recent weeks. On Wednesday, some Thai officials were evacuated by helicopter after the protesters briefly forced their way into Parliament.

The confrontation is part of the long-running battle between partisans of former leader Thaksin Shinawatra, ousted by a 2006 military coup, and those who oppose him. Thaksin was accused of corruption and showing disrespect to the country's revered monarch.

The demonstrators benefited from Thaksin's populist policies such as cheap health care and village loans. They have demanded that Abhisit dissolve parliament within 15 days and call new elections, claiming he took office illegitimately in December 2008 with the help of military pressure on parliament.

Instead, the prime minister has offered to do so by the end of the year.
 

kensington

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Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

The Stormtroopers...The Aggressors.
thai_protest_2.jpg



Thailand blocked opposition websites and TV channels and the prime minister scrapped an overseas visit a day after a state of emergency was declared to quell nearly a month of mass protests.

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva called off a one-day trip to Vietnam for a Southeast Asian leaders summit as tension remained high, with red shirt protesters vowing defiance.

On Wednesday, they stormed parliament, forcing officials to flee by helicopter and triggering an emergency decree that gives the military broad powers to control unrest.

Despite the decree, the red-shirted supporters of twice-elected and now fugitive former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra ignored orders to leave the capital's main shopping district and promised to stage their biggest rally yet on Friday.

The risk of a confrontation subdued Thailand's recently hot stock market, which posted its biggest fall in more than two months, losing more than two percent and underperforming its Asian peers.

The local baht currency was also weaker.

Frequent protests, violent riots, airport blockades and three changes in government in the past 19 months have hurt consumer spending, but the prospect of prolonged strife is already priced into Thailand's relatively cheap stocks.

Foreigners have snapped up $US1.82 billion of Thai stocks since February 22.

But, reflecting recent tensions, five-year credit default swaps widened 8 basis points on Thursday to as much as 109, the highest since March 4.

"The political factor has affected consumers and business," Bank of Thailand Chief Economist Suchart Sakkankosone told reporters, adding unrest could influence the timing of an interest-rate rise that most economists expect in June.

Overnight, two men on a motorbike fired into the offices of the nationalist monarchist "yellow shirts", wounding two security guards, witnesses said.

A grenade fired at a radio station affiliated with the yellow shirts failed to explode.

In 2008, the yellow shirts, who opposed Thaksin's allies in the previous government, occupied the prime minister's office for three months and blockaded Bangkok's main airport until a court expelled the government.

The recent protests pushed consumer confidence last month to its lowest level since November, data released on Thursday by the University of the Thai Chamber of Commerce showed.

"The political front will be a major issue of the Thai market today and we need to watch it closely," said Teerada Charnyingyong, an analyst at brokerage firm Phillip Securities.

Difficult choice

Abhisit faces a difficult choice: compromise and call an election he could easily lose, or launch a crackdown on tens of thousands of protesters that could stir up even more trouble.

Most analysts doubt the authorities will use force to remove the mostly rural and working class protesters who have been camped in Bangkok's upmarket shopping district since Saturday - a politically risky decision for Abhisit as his 16-month-old coalition government struggles to build support outside Bangkok.

The number of protesters in the district of malls and luxury hotels was growing steadily, reaching about 10,000 by early afternoon.

Numbers typically swell into the tens of thousands in the cooler evenings in a carnival-like atmosphere.

But pressure is growing on Abhisit from residents in Bangkok, a stronghold of his Democrat Party, to take decisive action to end the rolling protests, which began on March 14 when up to 150,000 massed in the city's old quarter.

"Abhisit has been accused of finding it difficult to make decisions and he seems to be struggling here somewhat. But it is a difficult position. There's human cost involved," said Danny Richards, senior Asia editor at the Economist Intelligence Unit.

The emergency decree allows authorities to suspend certain civil liberties, ban public gatherings of more than five people and stop media reporting news that causes panic.

Abhisit assured the public on Wednesday that the emergency would not be used to impose a crackdown.

Recently he has offered some concessions, including dissolving parliament in December, a year early, but protesters are demanding immediate elections.

By Thursday, authorities had blocked most websites associated with the protesters and taken several opposition TV channels off air.

Military checkpoints had gone up outside Bangkok to stop more from entering the sprawling city of 15 million people.

Red shirt leaders remained defiant.

"Today we will go on the offensive. We can't sit still and do nothing -- this is our right," Weng Tojirakarn said.

Another leader, Nattawut Saikua, said they "would not give up".



"We are not worried. This is not a state of emergency of the red shirts, it is for the government," he told reporters.
Uh..huh....have to agree on this tagline.:wink:





BETTER RED THAN DEAD
thai_protests_432.jpg
 

tonychat

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Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

The situation in Bangkok is worrying, and it's a somber backdrop to our discussions," Singaporean Foreign Minister George Yeo said. "I really hope that the situation there will not lead to violence."

What the hell does he knows about protest. Did he experience any of it? His own country are to coward to even face one.
 

kensington

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Protesters defy state of emergency in Bangkok


By DENIS D. GRAY
Associated Press Writer


Thailand's beleaguered government shut down a satellite television station and Web sites of anti-government demonstrators Thursday after declaring a state of emergency, while the activists vowed to retaliate by escalating their nearly month long protests.

The defiant "Red Shirts," attempting to drive Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva from office and call new elections, planned another mass rally Friday despite the emergency order that empowers the military to move against large gatherings.

Abhisit canceled a trip to Hanoi on Thursday to attend a summit of Southeast Asian leaders as he groped for ways to resolve the crisis without use of armed force.

The confrontation is part of a long-running battle between the mostly poor and rural supporters of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted by a 2006 military coup, and those who oppose him. Thaksin was accused of corruption and showing disrespect to the country's revered monarch.

Government spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn said the government has shut down PTV, the satellite TV station of the Red Shirts, and is searching for Web sites putting out false information such as claiming that Abhisit authorized the use of force against demonstrators.

"The government has succeeded in stopping certain media outlets from disseminating distorted and false information," he said.

Appearing on television, Panitan broke into English to apologize to foreign tourists and expatriates for any inconvenience recent events have caused them.

For the past week, several of the city's plushest shopping malls have been shut and upscale hotels in the same district left under virtual siege.

A protest leader, Nattawut Saikua, told followers that a media blackout "is just the first step for the government to clamp down on us tomorrow morning. If this is so, we're going to raise our protest to the maximum level."

Army spokesman Sansern Kaewkamnerd said the number of protesters at their two main encampments had dropped to some 5,500 and urged those remaining to return to their upcountry homes to celebrate Thai New Year April 12-15. He said security forces had thrown up checkpoints around the city to stop others from entering Bangkok.

At their peak, upwards of 100,000 Red Shirts have massed around the city.

Abhisit declared the emergency Wednesday night after protesters briefly broke into Parliament, following weeks of protests that have paralyzed the government and cost businesses tens of millions of dollars. Lawmakers were forced to flee on ladders over a back wall and senior officials were hastily evacuated by helicopter.

The demonstrators, called the Red Shirts for their attire, benefited from populist policies such as cheap health care and village loans under Thaksin.

They set up their makeshift camps in Bangkok's historic district March 12 and then spread to the main commercial district and beyond. They are demanding that Abhisit dissolve Parliament within 15 days and call new elections, claiming he took office illegitimately in December 2008 with the help of military pressure on Parliament.

Instead, the prime minister has offered to do so by the end of the year.

Protesters camped in the city have ignored court orders and a massive security presence. They have shown surprising tenacity as well as organizational skills, living under primitive conditions in scorching heat and moving around the city in well-ordered motorized columns.

Abhisit has been harshly criticized for failing to take strong measures to end the disruptive demonstrations. He has entered negotiations with the Red Shirts and ordered security forces to pull back from possible confrontations.

The emergency decree allows security officials to detain suspects without charge for up to 30 days and gives them the option of imposing curfews, banning public gatherings and censoring media.

Although the military now has greater power to restore order, both Abhisit and the army know a crackdown could result in bloodshed that would be political poison.

The media clampdown may also prove difficult, with Panitan acknowledging the protesters are trying to find ways to get around the blocks. PTV, set up and financed by Red Shirt sympathizers, is particularly important to the protesters as a means of communicating their aims and plans.

A number of small community radio stations are also allied with the protesters, who also use cell phones and social networking to communicate.

Most of Thailand's television stations are owned by the government but the country's many newspapers are privately owned and reflect a wide spectrum of political opinion.

Surat Horachaikul, a political science lecturer at Bangkok's Chulalongkorn University, said the emergency announcement can be interpreted in two ways.

"First, it might be an attempt by the government to buy some time. Or it might actually mean that the government and the army have reached an agreement in solving the current problem," he said.



Associated Press writers Jocelyn Gecker, Thanyarat Doksone, Kinan Suchaovanich and Grant Peck contributed to this report from Bangkok. Foster Klug contributed from Washington.

Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/04/08/1568944/protesters-defy-state-of-emergency.html#ixzz0kVK4SrYV
 

tonychat

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Protesters defy state of emergency in Bangkok

see that? that is also call balls..... i wonder if sinkie ever learn.
 

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610x.jpg

A man relieves himself at a makeshift red urinal set up for use for anti-government protesters, near the site of the ongoing rallies in central Bangkok on April 8, 2010.​
 

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1.
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2.
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1.Anti-government protesters step on the poster showing the picture of Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva at the site of a
rally in central Bangkok on April 8, 2010.​
2. A security guard reporting situation.​
 

kensington

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Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

Thai protesters demand government reopen TV station


Bangkok, Thailand (CNN) -- Anti-government protesters in Thailand remained defiant Thursday as they demanded officials reopen their television station, which was shut down amid accusations of misinformation.

Nation TV showed the anti-government protesters, known as the "red shirts," in a standoff with the military. They demanded the government reopen the PTV station, which was closed down shortly after the government declared a state of emergency Wednesday.

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva said the station was shut down "to restore peace and order and to stop the spreading of false information to the Thai public." 5555555555.....

The emergency measures ban the publishing, broadcasting or spreading information considered a threat to national security.

Demonstrations affected Thai stocks, which plunged by more than 24 points, about 3 percent, after the government declared the state of emergency.
Video: State of emergency in Thailand

Officials issued the emergency decree not long after demonstrators stormed the country's parliament. It allows authorities to take actions without court orders, such as summoning people, arresting and detaining people, and embarking on searches.

Abhisit said the measure is effective in Bangkok and nearby provinces. The opposition has encouraged people in Bangkok and provincial regions to join their protests.

Suthep Thaugsuban, deputy prime minister, made a televised announcement after the state of emergency was declared demanding that demonstrators leave protest grounds immediately. The government is offering transportation for those who want to return home.

But demonstrators vowed Wednesday to intensify protests unless Vejjajiva dissolves parliament.

After protesters stormed into the parliament building they then dispersed to regroup at their main gathering places at Phan Fa Bridge and Rajaprasong Intersection.

The group, United Front for Democracy Against Dictatorship, is made up of supporters of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted in a bloodless military coup in 2006. He fled the country in 2008 while facing trial on corruption charges that he says were politically motivated. He remains hugely popular.

The protesters say Abhisit was not democratically elected and have demanded that he call elections.



555
555
555...​
 

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Soldiers stand guard during a rally by anti-government protesters near Thaicom Teleport and DTH Center in Pathum Thani on the outskirts of Bangkok April 8, 2010. Thai protesters scuffled with riot police outside a satellite broadcaster on Thursday after the government blocked opposition websites and TV channels on the second day of a state of emergency to quell mass protests.​
 

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Soldiers walk past anti-government protesters during a rally near Thaicom Teleport and DTH Center in Pathum Thani on the outskirts of Bangkok April 8, 2010.

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Soldiers stand guard as an anti-government protester dances during a rally at Thaicom Teleport and DTH Center in Pathum Thani on the outskirts of Bangkok April 8, 2010.

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Thai police helicopter (top) flies over gathered red-shirted anti-government protesters as they continue their ongoing rally in central Bangkok on April 8, 2010. Thousands of red-shirted Thai protesters seeking to overthrow the government defied a state of emergency in Bangkok, vowing to stage another major rally in the capital.​
 

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Red-shirted anti-government protesters queue for food during lunch at the site of the ongoing rally in central Bangkok on April 8, 2010. This general view shows thousands of red-shirted anti-government protesters gathered at the site of continued rallies seeking to overthrow the government in central Bangkok on April 8, 2010.​
 

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RED SHIRTS RALLIES
Arrest warrants to be issued against red shirts leaders : Suthep
By The Nation
Police would issue arrest warrants against red shirts leaders who led the seizures of Rajprasong Intersection and Pan Fah Bridge, Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban said Tuesday.
"The arrest warrants for more than ten red shirts leaders will soon be issued," said Suthep who is chief of Peacekeeping Operations Commands.

Once the arrest warrants are issued, police could arrest the red shirts leaders whenever they are found.

Meanwhile a red shirts leader; Jatuporn Prompan, challenged police to arrest him and other leaders.

"We don't care how many arrest warrants would be issued against us. We would defy the warrants because we are fighting for democracy," he said.

He then has shown what he claimed to be recorded voice of Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva. The voice which the premier said was doctored ordered the authorities to use violence and kill the protesters.
 

eErotica69

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Mr Ramseth, you hit the nail right on their sinkie dickheads.

sinkies do not understand what is called personal rights. They are too used to getting the source of directions from the so called " Rules, order and law" from the start of their sinkie education way before their puberty.

when you are too used to follow law here and there, you lose sight what is it like to feel free and be free personally.

Once you understand what is being free personally, you will learn how to respect others' freedom and their rights. All this concept and learning are very democratic and are usually behaved by people in a real democratic country or countries that practises a high degree of it.

.

Tell me what freedom and rights are we talking about in Thailand?

When the TRT and later PPP and PT where democratically elected by majority Thais, a small minority known as the Yellow shirts protested and eventually the military/courts ovethrew a democratically elected Government.

You praised the yellow and said they got balls? So the actions of the yellow are democratic and with a lot of personal freedom (for the yellow)? Then what about the majority who voted for the TRT? They lost their democracy and their freedom to choose their Government? The reds also lost their freedom too? How do you explain that?

'Now you praise the red and said they got balls to protests?? Funny isn't it?

So is just protesting for the sake of protesting that's all?

What the real objective behind protests? If it is to acheive a certain goal, then indeed the yellow has achieved that (for now). So you think red is correct to protest against the yellow government now?

Then what next? Red becomes government and you yellow protest and again you praise the yellow?

So you got no stance, but just praise any protestors for protesting?
:confused:
 

eErotica69

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Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

Tonychat, let's cut the arguement short and answer this question which I have asked you twice.

OK if one day, the Opposition wins and PAP lost. You still tell Singaporeans to protest against the new Government and support the new Opposition (ie PAP)?

Answer me!!!


:mad:
 
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