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

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

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Anti-government protestors face off against Bangkok police Friday morning, April 23, 2010, in Bangkok, Thailand.

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Police vehicles occupy the front porch of a hotel close to clashes, Friday morning, April 23, 2010 in Bangkok, Thailand.​
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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Riot policemen stand off with anti-government demonstrators in front of a makeshift barricade Friday, April 23, 2010, in Bangkok, Thailand.

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

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Anti-government protestors gather stones and sticks as they prepare to face off against police Friday, April 23, 2010, in Bangkok, Thailand.

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

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Anti-government demonstrators peer out from behind barricades as they prepare to face off against police Friday morning, April 23, 2010, in Bangkok, Thailand.

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Anti-government demonstrators confront police in front of a makeshift barricade Friday morning, April 23, 2010, in Bangkok, Thailand.

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

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Anti-government look out from behind barricades as they prepare to face off against Bangkok police Friday morning, April 23, 2010, in Bangkok, Thailand.

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Anti-government protesters offer water to Thai policemen during a face-off between them Friday April 23, 2010 in Bangkok, Thailand.

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Anti-government protestors gather stones and sticks as they prepare to face off against Bangkok police Friday morning, April 23, 2010, in Bangkok, Thailand.

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

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A woman places red roses at the shattered window of a French cafe in Bangkok's Silom business district April 23, 2010. The cafe's window was destroyed when multiple explosions shook the area yesterday night. Hundreds of Thai riot police confronted anti-government protesters at a barricade in Bangkok's business district on Friday, a day after grenade attacks in the area killed three people, but later pulled back without violence.​
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

Bomb blasts hit Bangkok, at least 5 dead, 100 injured

BANGKOK, April 22 (Xinhua) -- At least five people died and about 100 others were injured in a series of bomb blasts that hit Bangkok's main financial district of Silom on Thursday night, local media reported.

Earlier, TPBS TV said a woman died after she was rushed to Chulalongkorn Hospital.

Unidentified gunmen fired M-79 grenades from the hospital's fifth floor, witness said.

The Headquarters of Bangkok Bank, Thailand's largest commercial bank, was hit by a bomb, leaving more than 20 injured, local media reported.

The blast occurred around 09:00 p.m., following three explosions that hit the third floor of Sala Daeng skytrain station, the sky walk and Dusit Thani hotel, leaving at least 20 injured within less than an hour.

After that, ambulances siren were frequently heard.

Sansern Kaewkamnerd, spokesman for the Center for the Resolutions of Emergency Situations or CRES confirmed that the explosions were caused by M-79 grenades.

The blasts occurred just minutes after 08:00 p.m., 500 meters from where the multicolored people were confronting with the "red- shirts" protesters at the Sala Daeng Intersection, the Nation news group said.

Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva has summoned a urgent security meeting soon after the explosions.

On North Sathorn road, some two kilometers from the explosion sites, dozens of soldiers with guns are seen patrolling.

Bangkok Skytrain authority has suspended services of four stations and the Subway authority has suspended services of five stations after the bomb blasts.

Meanwhile, the red-shirts protesters who camped nearby lit at least 10 fireworks to prevent army helicopters from entering the area.

On Thursday evening, the Civil Court issued an injunction against the use of force to break up the red-shirt rally at Rajprasong Intersection.

But the court noted that the demonstration affected the public so the government could use internationally-accepted measures to deal with the protesters from lighter to harsher measures.

Sansern Kaewkamnerd spokesman for the Centre for the Resolutions of Emergency Situations or CRES said in a telephone with TPBS TV that the army will not disperse the red-shirts protesters tonight.

"Initial investigation shows that the grenade were fired from the Suan Lum (Night Bazaar) about one km from Silom or near the red-shirts rally site," he said. "It is not the work by the army."

Late Wednesday night, hundreds of Bangkok residents threw things at "red-shirts" protesters, prompting an attack from the protesters, leaving at least 20 injured, including two foreigners.
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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Anti-government demonstrators cast a fishing net towards Bangkok police during a tense standoff Friday morning, April 23, 2010.
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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Abigshit: Police! Army! All yours, Restore Order!​
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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A Buddhist monk holds a sharpened bamboo stick as he stands with 'Red Shirt' anti-government protesters in their fortified camp during a stand-off with riot police at the Silom road intersection, in central Bangkok's financial district early on April 23, 2010.​
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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Thais head to work on a city bus past the red shirt protesters anti-government camp early morning as the tense standoff continues on April 23, Bangkok,Thailand.​
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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

Thai police tell Reds to retreat after grenade attacks
Posted: 23 April 2010 1508 hrs

Anti-government protesters shout slogans beside their barricade during a face off with riot police in Bangkok's financial district.


Related News
• Australia and US urge citizens to avoid Thailand
• Thai capital on edge after deadly grenade blasts
• Three dead, 70 wounded in Bangkok grenade attacks
• Thai army warns protesters 'time running out'
• Thai 'Red Shirts' rule out talks despite looming crackdown
• Thai 'Red Shirts' fortify base on fear of crackdown
• Photo Gallery: Thailand Unrest
Video
Thai police tell Reds to retreat after grenade attacks

BANGKOK : Thai police sought Friday to push back anti-government "Red Shirts" from a confrontation zone in Bangkok after deadly grenade attacks further stoked tensions in the long-running political standoff.

Hundreds of riot police, unarmed but carrying shields and batons, moved on the heavily fortified barricades which form the front line of the Reds' vast encampment that has paralysed the main retail district in the heart of Bangkok.

"Police asked protesters to move their barricade some 100 metres... to ease the confrontation but so far there is no agreement," Major General Anuchai Lekbumrung of Bangkok Metropolitan Police told AFP.

"There will more talks this afternoon," he said after police later withdrew from the barricades, a three-metre (10-foot) high wall of car tyres, sharpened bamboo staves and plastic sheeting which has also been doused with fuel.

The action came after five grenade blasts hit the area on Thursday night, targeting hundreds of pro-government supporters in attacks that left one Thai woman dead and scores wounded, including foreigners.

It was the latest bloodshed on the streets of Bangkok in the weeks-long standoff between the government and Red Shirts, and triggered alarm in the international community which issued urgent calls for for restraint.

Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban said the grenades were fired from within the sprawling Red Shirt encampment, but leaders of the protest movement -- who are campaigning for snap elections -- denied they were responsible.

"The bomb attacks last night have nothing to do with our movement, we still adhere to a policy of non-violence," said Red Shirt leader Nattawut Saikuar, accusing the government of orchestrating the blasts.

Nattawut told demonstrators to prepare for a crackdown by security forces, which have warned time is running out for Red Shirts who have staged rolling street rallies since mid-March.

"The authorities are trying to push in," Nattawut told the crowd from a rally stage, where live pop music was playing to entertain a dancing crowd despite Thursday's bloodshed.

The grenade blasts came after a failed attempt by authorities on April 10 to disperse the Red Shirts, sparking clashes that left 25 people dead and more than 800 injured in the worst civil unrest in almost two decades.

Suthep had said three were killed in the blasts, but emergency services and the health ministry said Friday that only one person was killed, a Thai woman.

The number of injured was put at between 78 and 85, including up to four foreigners -- an Australian man, an American, a Japanese citizen, and an Indonesian.

Ambulances rushed away bloodied victims after the grenades exploded at a station in the elevated Skytrain network, outside the exclusive Dusit Thani hotel and near a bank, causing panic on the streets.

The crowd of hundreds of government supporters, neatly dressed people of all ages who had been peacefully singing to Thai folk music and waving national flags, scattered into the night taking their injured with them.

The blast scene was littered with pools of blood along with abandoned shoes and Thai flags, in an area dotted with dozens of corporate towers as well as a notorious red-light district.

Clashes later broke out between riot police and hardcore pro-government demonstrators who had hurled bottles at their Reds rivals, triggering cat-and-mouse chases as police pursued the agitators through narrow alleys.

The United Nations appealed for restraint and several nations including the United States issued travel warnings for Thailand, which has been in turmoil since former premier Thaksin Shinawatra was ousted in a 2006 coup.

UN spokesman Martin Nesirky said the world body's chief Ban Ki-moon was "very concerned about the continuing standoff and tension in Thailand and the potential for this to escalate."

The army this week signalled it was preparing to crack down on the Red Shirts, and warned that security forces would use tear gas and live ammunition in any new clashes.

The Reds, drawn from the ranks of the rural poor as well as increasing numbers of urban working class, are mostly supporters of Thaksin, who is now living in exile to avoid a jail sentence for corruption.

They say the government of Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva is illegitimate because it came to power in a parliamentary vote at the end of 2008 after a court ruling removed Thaksin's allies from office.
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

Bangkok is not a Thai name. It's a foreign name given to it and became internationalised. In local Thai, Bangkok is called Krungthep Mahanakorn กรุงเทพมหานคร. It carries the equivalent meaning as ancient Chinese reference to dynastic capital, where the Throne of the Emperor was as 天子脚下 首善之区。What's the Thai King going to do about all these chaos under the feet of his Throne?
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

Singapore expresses concern over situation in Bangkok
Posted: 23 April 2010 1516 hrs

An injured woman is evacuated from a blast site in the financial district of central Bangkok



SINGAPORE: Singapore has expressed deep concern over the bomb blasts in Bangkok which have resulted in many casualties.

It hopes that all Thais, irrespective of their political views, will set aside their differences in the overall interests of Thailand, eschew violence and seek a peaceful, amicable and durable resolution.

A statement from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said this is crucial not just for Thailand but for ASEAN as a whole.

MFA would also like to remind Singaporeans that the April 10 statement advising Singaporeans against non-essential travel to Bangkok remains.

Singaporeans who are already in Bangkok are strongly advised to remain indoors as far as possible and avoid unnecessary travel within the city in particular to avoid the areas where demonstrations are occurring.

They should be on personal alert and monitor the news closely.

They should also take the necessary precautions for their personal safety.

Singaporeans who are already in Bangkok should eRegister immediately if not already done so here

This will enable the ministry and the Embassy in Bangkok to contact them and render the necessary consular assistance in case of emergencies. - CNA/vm
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

Bangkok is not a Thai name. It's a foreign name given to it and became internationalised. In local Thai, Bangkok is called Krungthep Mahanakorn กรุงเทพมหานคร. It carries the equivalent meaning as ancient Chinese reference to dynastic capital, where the Throne of the Emperor was as 天子脚下 首善之区。What's the Thai King going to do about all these chaos under the feet of his Throne?


Yes i am sure some of us are aware of it. Same thing with china. Non chinese ppl call it china but chinese call it the middle country.
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

In local Thai, Bangkok is called Krungthep Mahanakorn กรุงเทพมหานคร. It carries the equivalent meaning as ancient Chinese reference to dynastic capital, where the Throne of the Emperor was as 天子脚下 首善之区。What's the Thai King going to do about all these chaos under the feet of his Throne?
No disrespect, but is this case of both flesh and spirit is weak (ill and all that)? Or vested interests with the amataya? :confused:
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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A dog sits on the lap of a pro-government supporter as she holds ribbons in the colours of the Thai national flag during a counter-protest on Silom Road, in Bangkok's financial district April 23, 2010.

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A Thai army soldier keeps watch as pro-government supporters march down Silom Road during a counter-protest in the financial district, a day after grenade attacks in the area, in Bangkok April 23, 2010. Hundreds of Thai riot police confronted anti-government protesters at a barricade in Bangkok's business district on Friday, a day after grenade attacks in the area killed three people, but later pulled back without violence.

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Thai army soldiers stand guard on a sidewalk along Silom Road in Bangkok's business district as a woman carrying plastic bags walks past April 23, 2010.
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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A pro-government demonstrator holds up a poster depicting former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinnawatra as a terrorist during a rally to support Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva at a Si lom street Friday, April 23, 2010 in Bangkok, Thailand.​
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

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Pro-government supporters display placards with a picture of ousted former leader Thaksin Shinawatra, against the 'Red-shirts' anti-government protesters on Silom Road in the financial district of central Bangkok on April 23, 2010​
 
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