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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

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Thai soldiers stand outside a go-go bar on Patpong Road Monday, April 19, 2010, in the business district of downtown Bangkok, Thailand.

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Thai soldiers take position at Silom Road Monday, April 19, 2010, in the business district of downtown Bangkok, Thailand.

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Thai soldiers take position at a fly over at Silom Road Monday, April 19, 2010, in the business district of downtown Bangkok, Thailand.​
 

ahleebabasingaporethief

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

See how a undemocratic ELITE govt uses the media to paint the Reds as bad.

From the way events are unfolding, it should lead to CIVIL WAR in Thailand.

Power corrupts. ArbiSHIT is morally corrupt at the expense of the POOR's lifes.
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Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI


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The early morning sun rises over Bangkok, Thailand Monday, April 19, 2010, in the business district of downtown Bangkok, Thailand.

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Office workers walk past soldiers resting on the pavement of the sky train Monday, April 19, 2010, in Bangkok, Thailand.

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Thai soldiers take position at Patpong Road Monday, April 19, 2010, in the business district of downtown Bangkok, Thailand.

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Anti-government "red shirt" protesters sit in the main shopping district in Bangkok, early morning April 19, 2010.​
 

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

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Thai soldiers in actions on Mon, 19 Apr 10, Bangkok.

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Thai soldiers assemble at a street corner of the business district as an office worker walks past Monday, April 19, 2010, in Bangkok, Thailand.​
 

Muthukali

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

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Thai soldiers stand outside a go-go bar on Patpong Road Monday, April 19, 2010, in the business district of downtown Bangkok, Thailand.

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A Thai soldier stands outside a go-go bar on Patpong Road Monday, April 19, 2010, in the business district of downtown Bangkok, Thailand.

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Thai stands outside a go-go bar on Patpong Road Monday, April 19, 2010, in the business district of downtown Bangkok, Thailand.​

wee u wee..... LADY BOY..........:biggrin:
 

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

Thai troops on Bangkok streets to protect financial hub

BANGKOK : Hundreds of Thai troops poured into central Bangkok to protect the capital's financial hub on Monday, raising the stakes in the standoff between the government and "Red Shirt" protesters.

AFP reporters saw military and riot police, many of them with weapons, deployed in the central financial district, known as Silom, close to the Reds' current rally base in the capital's commercial heartland.

"There are several units currently armed to prevent themselves from attacks from terrorists who are hiding among protesters," government spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn told AFP.

Some troops hunkered down with their weapons on overpasses located above Silom's major thoroughfare, while others napped on the sidewalk after the deployment which took place in the early hours of the morning.

Security personnel had stacked uncoiled barbed wire at the roadside. Many were seen armed with assault rifles and shotguns while some had only riot shields.

Panitan would not comment on whether a crackdown was imminent against the protesters, who are demanding the ouster of embattled Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva.

"The plan to retake the area remains but operational units will analyse how and when to avoid confrontation and clashes," he said.

A soldier, asking not to be named, said they were there to block the Reds if they came up Silom Road. "We will not attack them, we are blocking them," he told AFP.

The deployment was the first by the military on the tense streets of Bangkok since a failed crackdown on the anti-government protesters nine days ago that left 25 people dead and more than 800 injured.

The "Red Shirts", mainly supporters of ex-premier Thaksin Shinawatra who was ousted in a 2006 coup, have occupied the capital for over a month, causing massive disruption to business, especially the tourism industry.

The Reds say that Abhisit's government is illegitimate because it came to power in a parliamentary vote, not a popular election, and that it is the tool of Thailand's elite in palace, military and bureaucratic circles.

A rival faction, the "Yellow Shirts" who are backed by the country's elite, vowed Sunday to take matters into their own hands if the government fails to deal with the protesters within a week, raising fears of clashes.

Yellow protesters in 2008 blockaded Bangkok's two main airports, leading to to a controversial court verdict that ousted Thaksin's allies and allowed the parliamentary vote that brought in the current government.

"If they gather peacefully, it will not be problem. But the people do not want more tensions with several groups of protesters," Panitan said of the threat of Yellows retaliation.

Abhisit handed broader powers to his army chief Anupong Paojinda on Friday after an operation to arrest senior protesters was badly bungled, allowing them to escape with their supporters.

The Reds announced plans on Sunday to step up their campaign for snap polls by boosting their numbers on Tuesday in the commercial area they are currently occupying in the heart of the city.

Army spokesman Sunsern Kaewkumnerd said the military would "contain" the protesters. "We will have police and soldiers working together," he told AFP Sunday.

The Reds have so far ignored calls by the authorities to disperse from their base in an upmarket retail and hotel district, despite security forces being positioned on top of the area's skyscrapers and outstanding arrest warrants in place against core leaders.

Leader Nattawut Saikuar said Saturday that 24 senior Reds would hand themselves over to police on May 15 to avoid another attempt to forcibly arrest them after a bungled operation Friday, but he added that 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."
 

zujjkiol

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

BANGKOK - THAI troops armed with assault rifles moved into Bangkok's central business district on Monday morning to stop thousands of anti-government protesters threatening to march down the capital's 'Wall Street.'

The government had earlier declared Silom Road, a thoroughfare studded with bank headquarters and office buildings, off-limits to the protesters who have camped in the capital's main shopping district nearby for weeks.

Troops initially blocked entry into the road, popularly known as Thailand's Wall Street, but then pulled back almost half its 2.5-km length to protect a key target of the protesters, the headquarters of the Bangkok Bank which was barricaded by razor wire.

Many of the demonstrators, who had earlier faced-off against the troops across an intersection, also pulled back but they braced for battle. Protesters piled rudimentary weapons behind the razor wire - bricks pulled from the area's brick lined pavements and stacks of bamboo rods. The so-called 'Red Shirts' claim the bank has close ties to the government. They have protested in front of the building previously on a smaller scale.

Earlier in the morning, soldiers also patrolled one of the city's most famous sex-bar strips, Patpong Road, and an entertainment area for Japanese tourists, which are just off Silom. Some took positions atop buildings after searching for possible snipers and along a skywalk running several hundred metres above the road. A small contingent of riot police stayed at the entry to Silom as neatly dressed employees walked past to their offices. Some businesses along the road were shuttered.

As Thailand's traditional New Year holiday ended, protest leaders had called for a mass rally on Tuesday on Silom in their bid to oust Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva. That has raised concerns of more clashes after savage fighting a week ago killed 25 people. -- AP
 

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

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A Thai army soldier holds his radio as he secures the Silom branch of the Kasikornbank in Bangkok's financial district April 19, 2010.
A Thai soldier stands guard among plants in front of the Bangkok bank headquarters along Silom road in the financial district of Bangkok on April 19, 2010.​
 

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

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A Thai army soldier stands guard in the Patpong area in Bangkok April 19, 2010.

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These guys need a good massage.​
 

streetcry

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

BANGKOK (Reuters) - Thai soldiers patrolled Bangkok's business district on Monday to keep thousands of anti-government protesters from marching there, raising fears of fresh violence in the polarised country.
Thai army soldiers rest in the Patpong area in Bangkok April 19, 2010. (REUTERS/Eric Gaillard)

Red-shirted supporters of ousted Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra said they would march to Silom Road, a banking and office district in the Thai capital, from their main base in an upscale shopping area, in defiance of an emergency decree.

Troops, some armed with machine guns, stood behind barbed wire and metal barricades facing hundreds of protesters, who had stockpiled poles and clubs behind their lines.

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva made army chief General Anupong Paochinda head of national security on Friday, replacing a deputy prime minister, after admitting efforts to control a five-week protest aimed at forcing an early election had failed.

The military followed that with a marked shift to more aggressive rhetoric, saying the protest in the capital that has decimated the key tourism industry must end, and it was prepared to clash with demonstrators if it had to.

"I want to urge the red shirts not to use children and the elderly as their front line to put pressure on the security forces," an army spokesman said after Anupong chaired a meeting on Monday with commanders involved in the crowd control. "But the operations will start from soft to heavy measures."

Adding to the combustible mix, rival "yellow shirt" protesters threatened a massive rally if the government failed to act within seven days, putting the deeply-divided nation on a collision course not seen in recent history.

"The CRES (the emergency control centre) is implementing a clear policy of keeping the rally from expanding to other areas, especially to key economic zones," government spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn said in a television interview.

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

Analysts say last week's clashes, which killed 25 and injured over 800, may have hardened attitudes and could be the spark that ignites a broader, more dangerous conflict.

The stock market was down 1.7 percent at the midday break in line with falls in other regional markets, after plunging 6.8 percent last week.

Bond yields fell as investors switched to the relative safety of government debt and bet the Bank of Thailand would not raise interest rates on Wednesday because political unrest could set back the economic recovery.

"WATERMELON SOLDIERS"

Fences were erected in front of underground stations and shopping malls, where some civilians hung signs calling for peace. Troops kept close watch on high-rise buildings from where snipers could operate.

Protest leader Nattawut Saikua was noncommittal on whether a rally would actually take place on Tuesday, when he said a "non-stop flow" of demonstrators would pour into the city.

The troop deployment in the Silom area was initially intended to break up the main protest, but the army top brass changed tactics at the last minute, he told reporters.

"The watermelon soldiers tipped us off that there was supposed to be a crackdown, but it was aborted when they saw how many of us there were," Nattawut said.

Some rank-and-file soldiers in green uniforms have been dubbed "watermelons" -- green on the outside with a red core.

Analysts say cracks in the armed forces along the country's colour-coded faultlines have the top brass worried about leaks and unsure of who to trust. Speculation is growing hardliners may try to stage a coup to end the five-year political crisis.

The government was forced to relieve police of responsibility to arrest "red shirt" leaders on Friday after a bungled raid on their hotel. Elements of the police are known to be close to ousted former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, himself a former policeman, who was ousted in a 2006 bloodless coup.

The "red shirts" accuse Thailand's elite of conspiring to topple him, and of backing the "yellow shirts" -- representing royalists, a business elite, aristocrats and the urban middle class -- in its bid to force Thaksin and his allies out of power.

Bangkok Bank, Thailand's biggest lender has its headquarters on Silom Road. It is a target of the red shirts because Prem Tinsulanonda, a former army chief and prime minister and the top aide to Thailand's revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej, is an honorary adviser to the bank.

An uneasy calm has prevailed in the capital since the deadly clashes between troops and demonstrators on April 10. Several thousand "red shirts" continue to rally at the Rachaprasong intersection, which they have dubbed their "final battleground".

The yellow-shirted People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) staged a crippling eight-day blockade of Bangkok's airports in December 2008, which left more than 230,000 tourists stranded.

The 2008 yellow-shirt airport siege ended when a pro-Thaksin ruling party was dissolved for electoral fraud, paving the way for Abhisit's coalition to take power after a parliamentary vote the red shirts say was influenced heavily by the military.

Abhisit rebuffs claims his government is illegitimate and has refused to step down and call immediate elections.

(Writing by Martin Petty; Additional reporting by Viparat Jantraprap and Adress Latif; Editing by Bill Tarrant)
 

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Thai soldiers stand guard along Silom road in the financial district of Bangkok on April 19, 2010. Presence of ‘watermelon soldiers’ – wearing green on the outside, but red in their hearts – could affect outcome of anti-government clash.​
 

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

Bangkok poised for another demonstration
By THANYARAT DOKSONE (AP)
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BANGKOK — Soldiers in full combat gear garrisoned the Thai capital's central business district Tuesday as thousands of anti-government protesters nearby threatened to disrupt Bangkok with a major rally.

More offices closed and at least one hotel reportedly shut down temporarily in face of another possible eruption of violence and a dramatic drop in tourist arrivals.

Leaders of the so-called "Red Shirt" protesters said they would stage an "important" demonstration Tuesday but did not disclose their specific plans.

Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva — speaking on government-run television channels — said he would not set a date for protesters to be forced out of their encampment at a busy intersection in the heart of Bangkok's shopping and hotel district. The demonstrators have camped out on the streets of the Thai capital since March 12.

The Red Shirt protesters, formally known as the United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship, initially were camped in a historic district of Bangkok. A failed April 10 attempt by security forces to flush protesters from that neighborhood erupted into the worst political violence Thailand has seen in 18 years, leaving 25 dead and more than 800 wounded.

"Let's not draw a deadline (to remove the Red Shirts)," Abhisit said. "I do realize Thais are troubled, that everyone wants it to be quick ... But there are many factors they have to take into account."

Rumors have been rife, however, about an imminent military crackdown.

The protesters consist mainly of poor rural supporters of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra and pro-democracy activists who opposed the military coup that ousted him in 2006. They want Abhisit to dissolve Parliament immediately and call new elections.

They believe Abhisit's government is illegitimate because it came to power through a parliamentary vote after disputed court rulings ousted two elected, pro-Thaksin administrations. The conflict has been characterized by some as class warfare, pitting the country's vast rural poor against an elite that has traditionally held power.

Armed troops initially moved before dawn Monday to block entry to Silom Road in the heart of the central business district, patrolling some of the city's most famous bar strips just off the main street. Some took positions atop buildings after searching for possible snipers and along a skywalk running above the road. Others guarded bank buildings, ATM machines and entrances to subway and elevated rail stations.

"I'm worried about the force allocation pattern here. It looks greater than necessary for just guarding the Silom area," said a protest leader, Nattawut Saikua. "They are making it into a killing field." Demonstrators braced for battle by stockpiling paving stones.

After a tense face-off early Monday, the troops pulled back almost halfway down the road's 1.5-mile (2.5-kilometer) length to protect a key target of the protesters, the headquarters of the Bangkok Bank, which was barricaded by razor wire. The Red Shirts claim Bangkok Bank has close ties to the government, and have protested in front of the building previously on a smaller scale.

Many of the demonstrators also pulled back, but piled rudimentary weapons at the intersection where the road begins.

Buapeuan Puisuwan, a jewelry craftsman who works in the Silom area, held a 2-feet (0.6-meter) long bamboo rod tightly in his right hand. His eyes were locked on a pedestrian bridge on the other side of the road where security forces stood.

About 100 bamboo poles, some sharpened, were distributed to protesters standing at one of the entrances leading to their main stage.

"I'm sure the soldiers will storm in. We don't really have anything to fight against them," Buapeuan acknowledged. "I know a bamboo pole can't handle whatever they have, but I'll stick with it anyway."

Tensions were also heightened a day earlier, when the rival, establishment-backed "Yellow Shirt" protest movement vowed to take action unless the government deals with the crisis. The group, formally known as the People's Alliance for Democracy, occupied Bangkok's airports for a week in 2008 to protest a Thaksin-allied government. They retreated after Abhisit became prime minister, but many fear their return if he is forced out.

"The situation at the moment is even more difficult to solve than before April 10 because deaths and injuries have occurred. The government and the protesters have confronted one another more often. Another round of crackdown is still possible," said Prinya Thewanaruemitkul from the law faculty of Bangkok's Thammasat University.

During the earlier street battles, the military lost a senior officer and suffered scores of other casualties among its troops, who were mostly equipped for riot control rather than lethal combat. The majority of the dead, however, were civilians.

The government accused "terrorists" armed with guns and other weapons of orchestrating the earlier violence and says weapons were stolen from the military that have not been returned.

Army Spokesman Sansern Kaewkamnerd said Monday that the officers deployed on Silom Road "have the right to carry weapons to protect themselves, and (I) believe the society finds it acceptable."

The virtual occupation of key areas of Bangkok by the Red Shirts has hit Thailand's lucrative tourist industry hard.

"All (hotels) are in bad shape as there are no tourists coming to the country," The Nation newspaper quoted Prakit Chinamourphong, president of the Thai Hotels Association, as saying. The newspaper said The Holiday Inn Bangkok closed down temporarily and others were expected to follow.

Associated Press writers Jocelyn Gecker, Grant Peck and Denis D. Gray contributed to this report.
 

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BANGKOK, THAILAND - APRIL 19: Thai army soldiers stand guard on the main street of the Silom district.

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Pedestrians walk past Thai soldiers as they rest on an over pass on Silom road in the financial district in central Bangkok on April 19, 2010.

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

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Thai army soldiers stand guard behind razor wire in the Silom Road financial district in Bangkok April 19, 2010.

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A Thai army soldier mans a position near a skytrain station in the Silom Road financial district as commuters walk past and tourists take pictures in Bangkok April 19, 2010.​
 

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Pedestrians walk past a Thai soldier standing on a overpass on Silom road in the financial district in central Bangkok on April 19, 2010.

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'Red Shirt' protesters stand behind a road block on a street during an anti-government protest at the main shopping district of central Bangkok on April 19, 2010.
 

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Soldiers and anti-government protesters.​
 

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

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A Thai soldier peeks through a net to look at chiobu on April 20, 2010.​
 
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