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

tioliaohuat

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

BANGKOK (Reuters) - Thai anti-government protest leaders evaded capture on Friday in a botched police raid, and Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva unexpectedly delayed his first address to the nation in four days.
Anti-government "red shirt" protesters gather in front of a stage in the main shopping district in Bangkok April 15, 2010. (REUTERS/Eric Gaillard)

Government promises to crack down on what it termed "terrorists" went awry when a protest leader at a Bangkok hotel slid down a rope from a balcony to escape riot police.

Another two were rescued by hundreds of "red shirts", who heavily outnumbered security forces at the hotel owned by the family of former premier Thaksin Shinawatra.

The leaders later joined around 10,000 of their supporters at a hotel and shopping centre in the middle of the city, now the main protest encampment.

"If they use force to disperse us, we will flatten the entire neighbourhood," said Jatuporn Prompan, a protest leader who was not among the three escapees, on a red shirt stage.

Abhisit had been scheduled to address national television at 1 p.m. local (0600 GMT) from an army barracks where he has been holed up during the month-long protests, but by 5.30 p.m. he had not done so and his aides could not provide a reason.

He has been absent from the public eye since Monday.

The government, which had previously said it would not directly confront the protesters, has also stepped up the rhetoric, although no troops were seen on Bangkok streets.

"We will arrest and suppress the terrorists. We have set up special task forces hunting for the terrorists," Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban said before launching the attempt to snatch opposition leaders.

The move against the red shirt leaders on Friday follows a failed attempt by troops to eject protesters from one of their sit-in sites in the city last weekend.

At least 24 people were killed and more than 800 wounded in the clash, Thailand's worst political violence since 1992, which only appears to have hardened the four-year political impasse and raised the possibility of more bloodshed.

STOCKS FALL

The risk of further instability sent Thai stocks down 3.25 percent. The market has now lost almost all its gains this year.

"Under the current uncertain situation, we recommend investors to stay along the sidelines at the moment as we could see a possibility of another 5 percent drop in the near term," Julius Baer Research said in a note to clients on Friday.

The $33 million LionGlobal Thailand Fund said it was "positive on the long-term outlook for the Thai market, overweighting the banking sector which is expected to benefit from the domestic economic recovery through higher loan growth and lower loan provisions."

Tourism has taken a hit, with occupancy rates less than a third of normal levels in Bangkok, according to a tour operator body.

Morgan Stanley said in a report that losses to tourism, which accounts for 6 percent of gross domestic product, could clip 0.2 percentage point from economic growth this year.

The government says Thailand's economy could grow 4.5 percent this year, but Korn warned that forecast could prove optimistic.

Thailand's five-year credit default swaps (CDS), often used as a measure of political risk, were trading at 111/116.85 against 105/111 bps on Monday, the last trading day prior to a three-day holiday.

The red shirts back Thaksin, who was ousted in a 2006 coup, and want Abhisit to step down immediately and call early elections. The government has offered December -- possibly October -- as poll dates. The powerful military chief this week also suggested early polls to resolve the crisis.

Finance Minister Korn Chatikavanij told Reuters on Thursday Abhisit would not resign as it would "be very negative for the country".

Protesters called off plans to march on television stations that they accused of biased coverage, removing one potential flashpoint with security forces. They hunkered down at their base in a central Bangkok shopping district, which they vowed to make a "final battleground" with the security forces.

The government has also said it would crack down on people it believed to be financing the red shirts and issued summonses under emergency powers for 60 people to report to a military barracks, where Abhisit has set up emergency headquarters.

(Additional reporting by Viparat Jantraprap; Writing by David Chance; Editing by Jerry Norton)
 

boundThunter

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

More people are joining the REDS movement eventhough the govt has ordered 200 anti-govt website closed and all these censoring are causing more distrusts than ever amongst the Thais.

The govt's propagandas on their daily tvs' presentations are dismissed outright by most rural folks who keep abreast the current news by weblogs and SMSs, etc...

The current govt is in a shit hole as it is powerless beneath the army, dissolution is ahead but for how long will they still cling to the flimsiest of power that they still actually had?




A Soldier's Story :
his account of events around Ratchadamnoen and Khao San on the night of 10 April was given by a conscript in a phone call to his family. Soldiers have been told not to communicate with the media so this report must remain anonymous.

Approximately 50 draftees who had not finished basic training were ordered to put on riot gear at dusk on Saturday and were driven to the Ratchadamnoen area. We were not told in advance where we were going or what our objective was. We were equipped with rubber bullets but no gas masks. We had previously received some training in riot control and had manned checkpoints, but in general discipline and leadership required improvement and we were inexperienced.

We quickly found ourselves in a confused fight with the red shirts. We were instructed to fire rubber bullets at the legs of protestors, but were facing bricks, sticks and gunfire. Tear gas was making it difficult to see what was going on. It wasn’t like a video game. There were other units, some from other services, but we saw no coordination among them.

The non-commissioned officer in charge of us was injured and taken away and no one took over. Many of the draftees ran for safety, some leaving behind weapons and other equipment. I was helping to pull wounded comrades out of danger. There were some bad injuries and we thought some people were probably dead. It was a terrifying situation.

At one point I was overcome with tear gas. Red shirts took off my helmet and I never saw it again. They washed the tear gas off my face. I and 2 friends were now isolated and did not know where to go. We tried staying put but it got too dangerous, so we started moving about and got lost. After 3 hours, we met a policeman in the middle of the night who told us where our unit was.

We got about 3 hours sleep and were transported back to camp the following afternoon. Of the 50 who had gone out, only about 20 remained. Some must be in hospital with injuries, and probably many just ran for their lives.

We have decided, among the draftees, that we will not go out on missions like this. The officers say this too. We have been told by the commanding officer that we will not be asked to go out again.


If Abhisit needs to go out with a bang, the Thai Army is willing to help but up to now, nobody is known to dare to call the shot. All are about posturings for the bonanza from the gravytrains of the next adminstration.
 

hotstuff

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

jia lat leh...i need to fly to bkk this weekend..how har?
 

boundThunter

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

The govt, the ruling elites, the army top brass, the porlumpars hiso...

What they have in common ?

UTTER Contempt for the commoners.



Now the people are empowered to raise hell whenever they feel like it and things would never be the same again.

They people have tasted power. The power of their votes could obliterate the ruling elites and dismantle the monarchical system when the times come acalling....Who the fuck in their clear-headed minds need a monarch ?
 

boundThunter

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The Ministry of Information and Communications Technology(MICT) forbids posting of pictures and divisive comments about 10 April clashes



The Ministry of Information and Communications Technology has instructed its staff to monitor the posting of pictures which show violence in the clashes on Saturday. People are warned not to post comments divisive to society.

According to www.dailyworldtoday.com on 12 April, Thaneerat Siripachana, Deputy Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Information and Communications Technology, said that on grounds of national security, the ministry would seek cooperation from webmasters of domestic websites to prevent the dissemination of such pictures. In the case of websites located abroad such as YouTube, the Ministry will work with the Foreign Ministry to seek cooperation from host countries.

He warned that the people should not post divisive comments, as they would violate the Emergency Decree and the 2007 Computer Crimes Act.



As usual, a clamp down on what people are thinking. The thought police on the prowls again. Anything shitty about the govt and the monarchy is a big NO NO...But they failed this time because internet is the great equaliser against the formidable govt's propaganda machines. No truths will be left unshared, and the art of gossipings(ninthar) will grow another notch in Thailand.
 

Ah Hai

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

Thai protest leaders "will surrender to police on May 15"

BANGKOK - Leaders of Thailand's anti-government "Red Shirt" protesters said Saturday they would surrender to police next month, but refused to end their rally in the capital's commercial heartland.

One week on from deadly clashes between the Red Shirts and security forces, the protesters said they expected a new push by the army to disperse them after its chief was put in charge of security in the strife-torn capital.

"On May 15, 24 of us will surrender. All of the leaders," said one of the top Red Shirts, Nattawut Saikuar. "For now the 24 of us will keep rallying to show sincerely that we won't run away," he said.

"I'm sure the order to suppress us will come out soon."

The Red Shirts, who are seeking immediate elections, have so far ignored repeated calls by authorities to disperse from the capital's commercial heartland, despite arrest warrants outstanding against core leaders.

They support fugitive ex-premier Thaksin Shinawatra and accuse the government of elitism and being undemocratic as it came to power after a parliamentary vote that followed a court verdict ousting Thaksin's allies.

Late Friday embattled Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva put his army chief Anupong Paojinda in charge of security, after a bungled operation to arrest some protest leaders at a hotel in Bangkok's northern outskirts.

Key Red Shirts gave alms to monks on their rally stage Saturday, in memory of last weekend's violence that left 23 people dead and more than 800 injured.

The mostly poor and rural-based red-clad movement has since abandoned its rally spot close to where the violence took place to instead reinforce numbers in a Bangkok district home to luxury hotels and shopping malls.

The military has said it will make a renewed attempt to disperse the protesters but has given no further details of its plans.

"There will be an effort to retake the area. We can't allow protests there because it damages the country," army spokesman Sunsern Kaewkumnerd told reporters late Friday.

Abhisit said that he was replacing his deputy as head of security operations in the capital, giving Anupong broader powers to tackle "terrorism".

"The government reassures you that we will restore normalcy," he said in a nationally televised address.

The decision came after commandos earlier Friday stormed a hotel where leaders of the Red Shirt protest movement were hiding, but the mission ended in dramatic failure after the suspects managed to flee.

One Red Shirt leader climbed down an electric cable from the third floor of the hotel in Bangkok's northern outskirts before being rushed away by jubilant supporters, despite the presence of dozens of riot police nearby.

The operation "was not a success but the government will carry on", Abhisit said.

The setback to the authorities came almost a week after the army tried in vain to clear an area of the capital of anti-government demonstrators, triggering the country's deadliest civil unrest in 18 years.

The Reds, who began their mass rallies on March 12, say their Siam Square rally spot will be the scene of the "final round" in their fight to overthrow the government.

Abhisit has blamed "terrorists" for inciting last weekend's violent street clashes, which sparked bloody gun battles in the heart of the capital.

The government, which imposed a state of emergency in Bangkok and surrounding areas more than a week ago, has accused Thaksin of stoking the unrest.

A legal aide announced Thaksin is to sue Thailand's Foreign Minister Kasit Piromya after the politician called him a "bloody terrorist".

"Dr Thaksin has assigned a team of lawyers to bring a libel case, both civil and criminal, against Mr. Kasit," Noppadon Pattama told AFP.

- AFP/ir
 

dysentry

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

25775_113386895348859_112988452055370_162401_3901655_n.jpg


Looks like Israel TAR-21 is used, not Sinkies SAR-21.
 

streetcry

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Thai protesters boost security at Bangkok base

BANGKOK (Reuters) - Thai anti-government protesters stepped up security at their base in an upmarket Bangkok shopping centre on Saturday, a week after bloody clashes with security forces killed 24 people.
Buddhist monks join anti-government "red shirt" protesters for a morning prayer in the main shopping district in Bangkok April 17, 2010. (REUTERS/Kerek Wongsa)

Thousands of protesters gathered under leaden skies to commemorate the deaths as more permanent fixtures of medical supplies, sanitary facilities and foodstalls were set up.

The "red shirts" have pledged to turn the area into a "final battleground" to oust Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, forcing high-end malls to close and sending tourists fleeing the area.

Abhisit said he would crack down on violent elements among protesters whom he calls "terrorists" and on Friday put his army chief in charge of security operations at the expense of Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban after a bungled attempt to arrest red shirt leaders.

However, he made no indication there would be immediate attempt to dislodge the protesters, calling for patience.

"There has been more talk of crackdown and possible attempts to take us in, so we have to make sure we are not infiltrated," protest leader Nattawut Saikua said, adding that the red shirts had no plans to march on Saturday and Sunday.

The red shirt leaders would make new sleeping arrangements at undisclosed locations, Nattawut said, as leaders recruited more volunteers among protesters to become their "guards".

The heightened security came after some leaders were surrounded by police on Friday morning. One made an escape by climbing down a hotel by rope, making headlines and highlighting security forces' failure at crowd control.

The red shirts back former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra who was ousted in a military coup in 2006 and want Abhisit to call snap elections, something the Oxford-educated premier has refused to do.

They threatened to march to a nearby business district on Monday, targeting Bangkok Bank's headquarters.

"We are considering taking our fight to a business associated with the ruling elite," said a leader Suporn Attawong.

Thailand's biggest bank was targeted in February by the protesters who accused it of crony capitalism amid ties to Prem Tinsulanonda, a former premier and chief adviser of Thailand's revered king.

Prem, an honorary adviser to the bank's chairman, is also accused of playing a role in the coup against Thaksin, accusations which he has repeatedly denied.

The political crisis in Thailand has hit tourism, a mainstay of Southeast Asia's second largest economy, hard and caused a selloff in the stock market which has given up almost all of this year's gains as foreign investors have sold heavily.

Protesters held a Buddhist ceremony to mark last weekend's clashes. Leaders gave monks alms and flowers, asking for blessings on behalf of their late comrades.

Although Bangkok was quiet seven days after the bloody clashes in which 19 protesters and 5 soldiers were killed and more than 800 people wounded, few expect a peaceful or fast resolution of the conflict.

Supporters of the government came out in thousands to express their disapproval of the red shirts on Friday.

Adding to the risk of clashes among civilians, an anti-Thaksin protest group known as the "yellow shirts", who in 2008 occupied Bangkok airport, said they would meet on Sunday to discuss their next move.

GOVT LOOKS TO ARMY

Abhisit made the first appearance on national television in four days on Friday from a fortified barracks on the outskirts of Bangkok, putting army chief General Anupong Paochinda in charge of security operations.

The move appeared to bind Anupong, who retires in September, into the government after he had expressed reluctance to use force, calling for the crisis to be resolved with "political solutions".

"A lot of people are losing patience and they are blaming the government for its failure to end this," said Sombat Thamrongthanyawong of the National Institute of Development Administration.

"At the same time, the government cannot do anything without the army's wholehearted backing to go in and crack down. So it's a continued paralysis that undermines the government's popularity and credibility," he said.

The seemingly intractable crisis has fuelled speculation that hardliners within the powerful military may decide to stage a coup to end the impasse, a move which analysts say would likely backfire with possibly violent response from the red shirts.

Coup rumours abound during each round of crisis in Thailand which has seen 18 successful coups since 1932.

(Writing by Ambika Ahuja; Editing by Nick Macfie)
 

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810x.jpg

ti-government protesters gather below a bridge where a defaced picture of Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva hangs in downtown Bangkok, Thailand, Saturday, April 17, 2010. Thailand's beleaguered government insisted it does not plan an immediate crackdown on Red Shirt protesters, saying Saturday there are too many people camped in the heart of Bangkok to resort to "harsh" measures.

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Pro-government supporters wave national flags under a portrait of the King Bhumibol Adulyadej during a demonstration to counter against the anti-government 'Red Shirts' at Victory Monument in central Bangkok on April 17, 2010. Leaders of Thailand's anti-government 'Red Shirt' protesters said on April 17 they would surrender to police next month, but refused to end their rally in the capital's commercial heartland.​
 

Rakyat

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Thai protests continue as leaders vow to surrender
BANGKOK : Leaders of Thailand's anti-government "Red Shirt" protesters said Saturday they would surrender to police next month, but refused to end their rally in the capital's commercial heartland.

One week on from deadly clashes between the Red Shirts and security forces, the demonstrators said they expected a new push by the army to disperse them after its chief was put in charge of security in the strife-torn capital.

"On May 15, 24 of us will surrender. All of the leaders," said one of the top Red Shirts, Nattawut Saikuar. "For now the 24 of us will keep rallying to show sincerely that we won't run away," he said.

"I'm sure the order to suppress us will come out soon."

The Red Shirts, who are seeking immediate elections, have so far ignored repeated calls by authorities to disperse from the capital's commercial heartland, despite arrest warrants outstanding against core leaders.

The Reds support fugitive ex-premier Thaksin Shinawatra and accuse the government of elitism and being undemocratic as it came to power after a parliamentary vote that followed a court verdict ousting Thaksin's allies.

About 7,000 Red Shirts were out in damp weather on Saturday, according to army figures.

Late Friday, embattled Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva put his army chief Anupong Paojinda in charge of security, after a bungled operation to arrest some protest leaders at a hotel in Bangkok's northern outskirts.

Key Red Shirts gave alms to monks on their rally stage on Saturday, in memory of last weekend's violence that left 23 people dead and more than 800 injured.

The mostly poor and rural-based red-clad movement has since abandoned its rally spot close to where the violence took place to instead reinforce numbers in a Bangkok district home to luxury hotels and shopping malls.

The rival anti-Thaksin Yellow Shirt campaign, which hit the streets ahead of the 2006 coup that ousted Thaksin and again to see off his allies in 2008, said it would meet at a Bangkok university on Sunday to discuss possible new moves.

The military has said it will make a renewed attempt to disperse the protesters but has given no further details of its plans.

"Retaking the area is part of authorities' duty to enforce the law.... We will have to enforce the law, but when we are ready. Now we are recovering our forces and trying to come to an agreement with protesters," army spokesman Sunsern Kaewkumnerd told reporters.

Abhisit said that he was replacing his deputy as head of security operations in the capital, giving Anupong broader powers to tackle "terrorism".

Earlier Friday commandos stormed a hotel where several Red Shirt leaders were hiding, but the mission ended in dramatic failure after the suspects fled, with one climbing down an electric cable from a third floor balcony.

Nattawut said their surrender was planned to avoid another attempt by security forces to forcibly arrest them, but added they would seek bail.

The setback to the authorities came almost a week after the army tried in vain to clear an area of the capital of anti-government demonstrators, triggering the country's deadliest civil unrest in 18 years.

The government has asked the police's special investigation department to probe the April 10 unrest.

The Reds, who began their mass rallies on March 12, say their Siam Square rally spot will be the scene of the "final round" in their fight to overthrow the government.

Abhisit has blamed "terrorists" for inciting last weekend's violent street clashes, which sparked bloody gun battles in the heart of the capital.

The government, which imposed a state of emergency in Bangkok and surrounding areas more than a week ago, has accused Thaksin of stoking the unrest.
 

Rakyat

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

BANGKOK - Leaders of Thailand's anti-government "Red Shirt" protesters said Saturday they would surrender to police next month, but refused to end their rally in the capital's commercial heartland.

One week on from deadly clashes between the Red Shirts and security forces, the protesters said they expected a new push by the army to disperse them after its chief was put in charge of security in the strife-torn capital.

"On May 15, 24 of us will surrender. All of the leaders," said one of the top Red Shirts, Nattawut Saikuar. "For now the 24 of us will keep rallying to show sincerely that we won't run away," he said.
 

ahleebabasingaporethief

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

Defiant red shirts put new radio station on air


By PRAVIT ROJANAPHRUK
THE NATION ON SUNDAY
Published on April 18, 2010
<!--End PhotoName1-->
A new red-shirt radio station went on air yesterday in the Rajprasong intersection protest-site area, in a move to counter the continued shutting down of red-shirt media by the government under emergency rule.


<!-- Google Dtail Ads --> <script type="text/javascript"> google_ad_channel = '4768931034'; google_max_num_ads = '3'; google_ad_type = 'text'; //google_image_size = '300x250'; //google_skip = '7'; var ads_ID = 'Google-adsense-indetail'; // set ID for main Element div var displayBorderTop = true; // default = false; var displayLandScape = false; // false=Default, true=landscape *** if set Landscape not allow ad type image var position_ad_detail ='in'; // ''=Default, in=Intext, under=TextUnderDetail </script> <script type="text/javascript" src="http://www.nationmultimedia.com/home/script/AdsenseJS.js"></script> <script type="text/javascript" src="http://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js"></script><script src="http://googleads.g.doubleclick.net/pagead/test_domain.js"></script><script>google_protectAndRun("ads_core.google_render_ad", google_handleError, google_render_ad);</script><script language="JavaScript1.1" src="http://googleads.g.doubleclick.net/pagead/ads?client=ca-pub-1044823792492543&output=js&lmt=1271554092&num_ads=3&channel=4768931034&ad_type=text&adtest=off&ea=0&feedback_link=on&flash=10.0.45&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.nationmultimedia.com%2Fhome%2F2010%2F04%2F18%2Fpolitics%2FDefiant-red-shirts-put-new-radio-station-on-air-30127342.html&dt=1271554093249&shv=r20100331&correlator=1271554093252&frm=0&ga_vid=2128381860.1271553993&ga_sid=1271553993&ga_hid=1436637426&ga_fc=1&u_tz=480&u_his=1&u_java=1&u_h=800&u_w=1280&u_ah=770&u_aw=1280&u_cd=24&u_nplug=27&u_nmime=115&biw=1280&bih=619&ref=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.nationmultimedia.com%2Fhome%2F&fu=0&ifi=1&dtd=28"></script>


<!-- Google Dtail Ads --> "They should allow us to criticise [the government], but instead they shut our ears and eyes," Chinawat Haboonpak, a red-shirt leader told the crowd at the intersection yesterday morning. "We ask for just one television channel, but they have taken it away from us and shut our ears and eyes again."The new station - on FM 106.80 - broadcasts from a new tower installed near Lumpini Park and calls itself Rajprasong Community Radio. Its reception can be received all the way to Bang Na area, in eastern Bangkok.
Chinawat admitted he decided to shut down Taxi Radio on Friday after the government had succeeded in jamming it to the point where its reception was so limited as to be inconsequential.
Chinawat, who was behind Taxi Radio, said it was not worth the Bt30,000 cost of electricity per month. "There are 5,000 to 6,000 stations, but they won't allow one [red-shirt] radio station to exist," he complained.
Two directors of red-shirt community radio stations were summoned by the government's state of emergency operations centre on Friday. On the Internet, 190 websites are now blocked or shut down by the government.
One of the few remaining red-shirt radio stations, broadcasting from a suburban area of Bangkok, heavily denounced the government yesterday for shutting down PTV, community radio stations and websites.
The continued censorship of red-shirt media has turned the government of Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva into a "tyrannical regime", it said, while denouncing the censorship as "illegal".
"He's a liar," said Wood Model, a red-shirt radio host yesterday, in reference to Abhisit. "Thailand has become a country of lies. This government can order the media around and shut down media and infringe on people's rights and liberty - truly a dictatorship. He's shameless."
<input id="gwProxy" type="hidden"><!--Session data--><input onclick="jsCall();" id="jsProxy" type="hidden">
 

tioliaohuat

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

BANGKOK - THAILAND'S powerful army chief Anupong Paochinda yesterday met top commanders as 'red shirts' pledged to escalate protests again to pressure Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva to call an early election.

But government spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn insisted that the authorities would not use force against red shirt protesters in downtown Bangkok.

'People want this settled quickly, but the authorities also face their limitations. There are a lot of people out there and we cannot do anything harsh,' he told the Associated Press.

The red-shirted United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship has been campaigning for more than a month in the capital, and the protests showed few signs of losing steam yesterday.

A daytime crowd of about 2,000 people at the upscale Ratchaprasong intersection swelled to nearly 10,000 by evening.

In a surprise statement yesterday, co-leader Nattawut Saikuar told reporters that on May 15, all 24 leaders who have arrest warrants out for them would surrender to the police.
 

Muthukali

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At the conclusion, the farang received help and compassion from the Thai people. Now you know why tourists love to go to thailand, it is the people.

ANd why sinkieland has a hard time not getting more tourists, build all the bullshit casino also no use, It is because of the people too.

Why Thailand has world cup and sinkieland do not have it, it is because of the people too.

That is why i say, stay away from sinkies.

U can try silom..... see whether they cover you or not.
 

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910x.jpg

Pro-government protesters rally in support of the Thai government at Bangkok's Victory Monument on April 17, 2010 in Bangkok, Thailand. Red Shirt protesters have relocated to the Rajprasong shopping area in what they are referring to as their final battlefront to oust the current Prime Minister and force fresh elections.
910x.jpg

Pro-government protesters rally in support of the Thai government at Bangkok's Victory Monument on April 17, 2010 in Bangkok, Thailand.​
 

streetcry

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Thai army says will "punish" protesters

BANGKOK (Reuters) - Thailand's military vowed on Sunday to punish anti-government protesters if they marched on Bangkok's central business district, heightening fears of more violence after bloody clashes left 24 people dead a week ago.
An anti-government "red shirt" protester sits next to a defaced portrait of Thailand's Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva in the main shopping district in Bangkok April 18, 2010. (REUTERS/Eric Gaillard)

Red-shirted supporters of ousted premier Thaksin Shinawatra would face resistance if they protested or tried to set up camp in the city's banking district this week in defiance of an emergency decree in place across the capital, the army said.

Army spokesman Sansern Kaewkamnerd stopped short of using the word "crackdown" but said protesters occupying a plush shopping and hotel district for a 16th day would also be dealt with. He did not elaborate and gave no timeframe.

"Let's say that we are left with no choice but to enforce the law," Sansern told TNN television.

"Those who do wrong will get their punishment. Taking back the area along with other measures are all included in enforcing the law. All this must be done," he said.

A period of uneasy calm has prevailed in the capital over a Thai new year holiday period in the wake of Thailand's worst violence in almost two decades, which triggered a huge selloff in the stock market after six weeks of gains.

A heated confrontation between troops and demonstrators, who are demanding that Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva dissolve parliament and step down, led to bloody clashes on April 10, the first outbreak of violence in the six-week protests.

Adding to concerns about more unrest, leaders of the anti-Thaksin "yellow shirts" movement -- representing royalists, the business elite, aristocrats and urban middle class -- planned to meet later on Sunday to discuss their position on the crisis.

The "yellow shirts" staged a crippling eight-day blockade of Bangkok's airports in December 2008, which stranded more than 230,000 tourists, disrupted trade flows and led to credit ratings downgrades for Southeast Asia's second-largest economy.

For a graphic: http://link.reuters.com/rap67j

The siege ended when a pro-Thaksin ruling party was dissolved for electoral fraud, paving the way for Abhisit's rise to power after a parliamentary vote the "red shirts" say was influenced heavily by the military in a "silent coup".

Abhisit rebuffs claims his government is illegitimate and has refused to step down. He failed to deliver his regular televised address on Sunday for a second week and has been uncharacteristically reclusive since last week's clashes.

ELITES TARGETTED

Several thousand protesters rallied on Sunday at the Rachaprasong intersection, dubbed their "final battleground", listening to speeches and huddling in the shade as the burning sun took its toll. More were arriving for a rally that typically draws tens of thousands by evening.

The planned protest on Tuesday would target Bangkok Bank, Thailand's biggest lender, which "red shirts" have linked to the elites they say conspired to bring down elected governments backed or led by the popular Thaksin, who was ousted in a 2006 coup and fled into exile ahead of a graft conviction.

Protesters have taken aim at Prem Tinsulanonda, a former army chief, premier and honorary advisor to the bank, who serves as the top aide to Thailand's revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej.

Faced with criticism over the military's handling of the protests, Abhisit appeared on television on Friday to announce that responsibility for security had been handed to army chief Anupong Paochinda, who retires in September and has been reluctant to tackle the protests.

"I think him passing responsibility to the commander-in-chief is his way of pushing him to actually do something, since he will be responsible for what happens now," said Joshua Kurlantzick of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, a U.S. think tank.

"I'm not sure it's Abhisit trying to evade responsibility. He's still going to have to face the consequences at the polls at some point."

The seemingly intractable five-year crisis has fuelled speculation that with the government and security forces in disarray, and concerns about clashes between rival demonstrators, hardliners within the military may decide to stage a coup to end the impasse, which analysts say would likely backfire.

(Additional reporting by Eric Gaillard; Editing by Bill Tarrant)
 

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

Now the genie is out of the bottle and that fat yellow whale confirmed of palace's meddlings. Her actions from the past few days just reconfirmed what was mostly thought of as rumours and nothing more than rumours.

Queen Sirikit has been outspoken but her moves will only aggravate the situations.
 

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

Thai "Yellow Shirts" give govt ultimatum over crisis

BANGKOK : Thailand's pro-establishment "Yellow Shirts" gathered in their thousands on Sunday to discuss a response to weeks of anti-government protests that left 23 dead in clashes last weekend.

The country is largely split between "Red Shirts", who mostly support former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, and their yellow-clad rivals who hit the streets ahead of a 2006 coup ousting Thaksin and again to see off his allies in 2008.

The yellow protest group, backed by the country's elite, has remained largely silent since the Reds' mass rallies against premier Abhisit Vejjajiva started in mid-March, but they convened Sunday to discuss Thailand's troubles.

"We are having a meeting today because we know that now the country is in crisis," said Parnthep Pourpongpan, a spokesman for the group formally known as the People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD).

"We have the PAD representatives from different provinces coming to analyse the situation and lay out the structure for long-term solutions. There are 3,000 to 5,000 people joining the meeting today," he said.

The PAD protests in 2008 culminated with a siege of Bangkok's main airports, which ended with a controversial court verdict ousting Thaksin's allies from power and was followed by a parliamentary vote bringing Abhisit to office.

As the Yellows met at a Bangkok university Sunday, the Reds were also discussing the next move in their campaign for immediate elections, eight days on from deadly clashes with security forces that also injured more than 800.

The Reds have since abandoned their rally spot close to where the violence took place to instead reinforce numbers in a district that is home to luxury hotels and shopping malls.

They were debating Sunday whether to march to Silom, the capital's main financial area, but the army said it would prevent such moves, raising fears of more violence.

"We will contain them so they don't go into the Silom area. We will have police and soldiers working together. We have received some information that they might go there soon," army spokesman Sunsern Kaewkumnerd told AFP.

The Reds have so far ignored repeated calls by authorities to disperse from the shopping heartland, despite outstanding arrest warrants against core leaders.

Leader Nattawut Saikuar said on Saturday that 24 senior Reds would hand themselves over to police on May 15 in a move designed to avoid another attempt by security forces to forcibly arrest them, but he added they would seek bail.

"For now the 24 of us will keep rallying to show sincerely that we won't run away," he said. "I'm sure the order to suppress us will come out soon."

The Reds, many of whom come from poor and rural northern areas, say Abhisit's government is elitist and came to power illegitimately with army backing.

The embattled prime minister, who cancelled his weekly television broadcast Sunday for reasons that remained unclear, has handed broader powers to his army chief Anupong Paojinda after a bungled operation to arrest senior protesters.

On Friday, commandos stormed a hotel north of the city where some Red leaders were hiding, but the mission ended in dramatic failure after the suspects fled, with one climbing down an electric cable from a third floor balcony.

The setback to the authorities came almost a week after the army's failed attempt to clear a Bangkok area occupied by anti-government demonstrators triggered the country's deadliest civil unrest in 18 years.

The government has asked the police's special investigation unit to probe the bloodshed, blaming "terrorists" for inciting violence and accusing Thaksin, who lives abroad to avoid a jail term for graft, of stoking the unrest.
 

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

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A pro-government supporter waves Thai national flags and holds a sign in support of embattled Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva during a demonstration to counter against the anti-government 'Red Shirt' protests at Victory Monument in Bangkok on April 18, 2010.​
 
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