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

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

Thai King Pressured
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Debate on monarchy's role
Apr 13, 2010
WASHINGTON - Thailand's foreign minister has issued a rare call for a debate on the role of the revered monarchy in the political process, following the country's worst civil violence in almost two decades.
Kasit Piromya said in Washington that any resolution to the political crisis gripping Thailand might see the role of the royals revamped, with greater involvement in the political arena given to the rural poor.
'It is a process that we have to go through and I think we should be brave enough to go through all of this and to talk about even the taboo subject of the institution of the monarchy,' he said at a seminar on Monday.
'I think we have to talk about the institution of the monarchy, how it would have to reform itself to the modern globalised world,' Mr Kasit said, citing the examples of Britain and the Netherlands as countries where the role of the royal family has been adapted. 'Everything is now becoming in the open,' he added. 'Let's have a discussion. What type of democratic society would we like to be?'
The monarchy's role remains one of the most sensitive subjects in the kingdom, where violent clashes Saturday between the army and anti-government 'Red Shirts' left 21 people dead.
Insulting the royal family is a serious crime punishable by up to 15 years in prison. -- AFP

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Thailand's King Bhumibol Adulyadej makes an appearance with his dog at Siriraj Hospital in Bangkok February 27, 2010.​

King a unifying figure
* King Bhumibol Adulyadej, 82, has no official political role but is seen as a unifying figure in a country that is frequently riven by political unrest.

* During a 1992 uprising he chastised both the military and protest leaders, effectively bringing an end to the violence, and a Red Shirt leader has called on the king to intervene in the latest crisis to prevent further bloodshed.

* King Bhumibol, who is the world's longest-reigning monarch and revered as a demi-god by many Thais, has been hospitalised since September and has not commented publicly on the latest turmoil -- AFP
 

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A 'Red Shirt' protestor(or molester) :biggrin: rubs powder on to the face of a tourist during the Songkran festival to mark the Thai new year along the tourist area of Khao San road in Bangkok on April 13, 2010. Songkran marks the summer season in Thailand, where families and friends celebrate the festival by visiting temples and splashing water on each other's hands as an act of wishing good luck.​
 

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Foreign tourists spray a child with water guns during the Songkran festival to mark the Thai new year along the tourist area of Khao San road in Bangkok on April 13, 2010.

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People spray each other with water guns during the Songkran festival to mark the Thai new year along the tourist area of Khao San road in Bangkok on April 13, 2010.
 

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An anti-government "red shirt" protester splashes water on others as they celebrate the Songkran festival that marks the Thai new year, near the Democracy Monument in Bangkok, April 13, 2010. Thailand's Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva came under mounting pressure on Tuesday to resolve a stand-off with anti-government protesters after the Election Commission recommended his party be dissolved.​
 

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A container with Thomson Reuters TV cameraman Hiro Muramoto's body is lowered upon returning to Japan from Thailand at Narita International Airport in Narita, east of Tokyo, Tuesday, April 13, 2010.

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Airport ground crew bow to pay their respects as a container bearing the body of The Thomson Reuters' TV cameraman Hiro Muramoto arrives back at Narita International Airport in Narita, east of Tokyo, Tuesday, April 13, 2010
 

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A container bearing the body of the Thomson Reuters' TV cameraman Hiro Muramoto is transported out upon arrival back at Narita International Airport in Narita, east of Tokyo, Tuesday, April 13, 2010.​
 

ektay

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Knn, why the Thai army never shoot you! :mad:

cos little tony boy was hiding somewhere in bangkok.....tremble with fear that that rubber bullet will hit him.....haha.
 

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Thai DPM, Suthep Thaugsuban : How much for Thaksin's head?
Cambodia PM, Hun Sen : $$$$$$$$$


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Hahaha excellent captions for the above photos.
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Yellow shirt supporters wave the Thai national flag during a pro-government rally at the Victory Monument in Bangkok April 13, 2010. About 300 "yellow shirts" gathered at the Victory Monument war memorial, calling on the red shirts to go home. The yellow shirts are made up of academics, businessmen, royalists and urban middle-class activists opposed to ousted former premier Thaksin Shinawatra and the political parties he has backed from exile.​
 

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Anti-government "red shirt" protesters sleep at the Democracy monument, the site of fierce street battles with Thai security forces, in central Bangkok April 14, 2010.​
 

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Anti-government "red shirt" protesters read morning papers at the site of fierce street battles with Thai security forces in central Bangkok April 14, 2010.​
 

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An anti-government "red shirt" demonstrator gestures on top of an abandoned armoured vehicle behind a picture depicting Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, at the site of fierce street battles with Thai security forces in central Bangkok April 14, 2010.​
 

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An anti-government 'Red Shirt' protester helps her daughter onto an abandoned army vehicle during celebrations of the Songkran festival marking the Thai new year, at Democracy monument, the re-occupied site of fierce street battles between protesters and the army at the week-end, in Bangkok on April 13, 2010. The Thai authorities will allow 'Red Shirt' protesters to keep up their rallies in Bangkok for months if they do not use violence, Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban said.​
 

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Rally to move to commercial hub

BANGKOK - THAILAND'S anti-government 'Red Shirts' said on Wednesday they would reinforce a mass rally in the heart of Bangkok's commercial district, leaving another protest site in the historic district.

The demonstrators will move out of the capital's old city, the scene of the country's worst civil violence in 18 years at the weekend, and converge in the shopping and hotel district, one of their leaders said.

'We will have a big and strong army,' said the leader, Nattawut Saikuar.

'It will give us more unity and make it easier to move from one protest site to our targeted places. It will more it easy for us to take care of security.'

Thousands of Reds, many of whom are from Thailand's rural poor community, have been occupying two sites in central Bangkok in their bid to topple the government, which they accuse of being elitist and undemocratic.

The Reds' rally in the commercial district has blocked traffic and caused shops to shutter their stores, but there has been no violence in the area, in stark contrast to the bloodshed in the historic quarter. -- AFP
 

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BANGKOK - WHO were the shadowy gunmen firing on troops in Bangkok's bloody riots last weekend, and who fired the grenades?

The answers to those questions could point to the emergence of a dangerous split within Thailand's armed forces, one that could spark more bloodshed unless the beleaguered government calls elections promptly to defuse the political tensions.

Saturday's clashes, which killed 21 people and wounded hundreds, were not only Thailand's worst riots in 18 years. They may have taken the country a step closer to the worst-case scenario in its five-year-old crisis: a fissure in the military along social and political fault lines dividing the country.

Although the city has since calmed down, tens of thousands of anti-government 'red shirt' protesters remain on the streets of Bangkok demanding Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva dissolve parliament. Analysts say that large numbers of soldiers of lower ranks and some senior officers have long sympathised with the mostly rural and working-class 'red shirt' movement behind more than a month of protests demanding immediate elections.

Many of the military's top brass are at the other end of the political spectrum, allied with royalists, business elites and the urban middle classes who wear yellow or pink at counter-protests and broadly back the 16-month-old government.

An army official who asked not to be identified said many mid-ranked and senior officers allied with Thaksin during his 2001-2006 administration were sidelined, and are now throwing their weight behind the 'red shirts' to win power back. -- REUTERS
 

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Nattawut Saikua, leader of the United Front for Democracy Against Dictatorship (UDD), speaks during a news conference in the main shopping district of Bangkok April 14, 2010. Thailand's "red shirt" protesters ruled out talks with the government and said they would concentrate on one site in the capital Bangkok in readiness for a final battle to oust the country's prime minister.
Another protest leader, Weng Tojirakarn, said Tuesday night that the group was sticking to its demand that Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva immediately dissolve Parliament and hold elections. But he canceled an earlier announced "offensive" against the army camp where Vejjajiva has been staying.​
 

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BANGKOK : Thailand's anti-government "Red Shirts" said Wednesday they would reinforce a mass rally in the heart of Bangkok's commercial district, leaving another protest site in the historic district.

The demonstrators will move out of the capital's old city, the scene of the country's worst civil violence in 18 years at the weekend, and converge in the shopping and hotel district, one of their leaders said.

"We will have a big and strong army," said the leader, Nattawut Saikuar. "It will give us more unity and make it easier to move from one protest site to our targeted places. It will more it easy for us to take care of security."

Thousands of Reds, many of whom are from Thailand's rural poor community, have been occupying two sites in central Bangkok in their bid to topple the government, which they accuse of being elitist and undemocratic.

The Reds' rally in the commercial district has blocked traffic and caused shops to shutter their stores, but there has been no violence in the area, in stark contrast to the bloodshed in the historic quarter.
 

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Army spokesman Colonel Sansern Kaewkamnerd speaks during a news conference at the Thai Army 11th Infantry Regiment in Bangkok April 14, 2010.​
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Army spokesman Colonel Sansern Kaewkamnerd shows a video clip of a dead person, explaining that the bullet was fired from the side of the protesters, during a news conference at the Thai Army 11th Infantry Regiment in Bangkok April 14, 2010.​
 

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Phan Fa reds move to Ratchaprasong
14/04/2010
The United front for Democracy against Dictatorship (UDD) will not rally at the 11th Infantry Regiment base today and will instead move its supporters from the Phan Fa bridge rally site to join its forces at Ratchaprasong intersection, UDD core leader Natthawut Saikua said on Wednesday.
“The removing of supporters from Phan Fa bridge is for preventing the red-shirts from being easily dispersed by the government,” Mr Natthawut said.
He said Jatuporn Prompan, another UDD core leader, is assigned to explain the reason to the red-shirts gathering at the Phan Fa bridge main rally site on Ratchadamnoen Avenue.
He expected the moving of the red-shirts and food supplies from Phan Fa Bridge to Ratchaprasong would be completed late this afternoon.
Mr Natthawut was confident the red-shirts would soon win their war against the Democrat-led government.
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Anti-government "red shirt" protesters move from the Phan Fa bridge to Rajprasong, the main shopping district in Bangkok, April 14, 2010
 
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