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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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Soldiers move along a street during the operation.



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Soldiers take cover behind a statue.



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Thick black smoke plummets through the air behind the main Chulalongkorn hospital. Photo: AP



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


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Thai soldiers use elevated train tracks to move on anti-goverment protestors near Lumpini Park.



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Thai soldiers approach a barricade.



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An armoured vehicle approaches a barricade.




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


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An unidentified foreign woman takes photographs just outside an anti-government protest area today.


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A Thai soldier takes position at Lumpini Park. Photo: AP


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An armoured vehicle breaks through an anti-government barricade today. Photo: AP





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


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Firemen douse a fire at a barricade at Lumpini Park. Photo: AP


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Thai soldiers take up position near Lumpini Park. Photo: AP


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Thai soldiers run to take cover near a anti-government barricade . Photo: AP



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


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Red-shirt protesters carry a wounded comrade. Photo: AFP


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An armoured vehicle is obscured by smoke from a burning barricade. Photo: Reuters


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A soldier mans a weapon on an armoured vehicle. Photo: Reuters



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


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Buddhist monks carry an injured red-shirt protester. Photo: AFP


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A soldier carries his weapon during the operation to evict red-shirt protesters from their encampment in Bangkok. Photo: Reuters


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A Thai army soldier crosses a barricade. Photo: Reuters



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


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Fires burn on a boulevard near the Pratunam intersection in downtown Bangkok. Photo: AFP


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An anti-government supporter runs past burning tyres which were set ablaze to block army soldiers. Photo: Reuters


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A Thai demonstrator uses a slingshot to launch a firecracker towards the army. Photo: AFP



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


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Anti-government red-shirt supporters launch fireworks towards army soldiers. Photo: Reuters


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A red shirt protester fires a slingshot. Photo: AFP


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A Thai demonstrator points at army positions from behind a barricade in downtown Bangkok. Photo: AFP



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


Thai Government Extends Curfew as Clean Up From Crackdown.


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The Thai government has extended an overnight curfew for three days as security in Bangkok remains uncertain after the army broke up an anti-government protest camp. The city has set about cleaning up from the months of protests and nearly a week of street violence. City workers using bulldozers and trucks Thursday set about clearing away the debris left after the Thai army shut down the red-shirt protest camp in Bangkok’s center.




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


Bangkok burns as Thai troops hunt protestors

Bangkok: Thai troops fired into the air on Thursday as they approached a temple where several hundred Red Shirt protestors had sought shelter after security forces dispersed them a day before and their leaders surrendered. Fires were still burning in central Bangkok after an overnight curfew that followed a day of riots and arson in which health officials said at least seven people were killed.

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The Erawan Emergency Medical Centre also said 81 people were wounded in the fighting at the protestors' camp in a commercial district in the heart of the capital and in skirmishes that broke out around the city.
It was uncertain whether the rioting represented a final outpouring of protestors' anger or whether it would intensify in days ahead.

A Reuters photographer said the protestors at the temple, including many women and children, ran in fright at the sound of the gunshots. A Reuters reporter said there were at least six bodies at the site, which appeared to have been there some time. An Erawan official said she was aware of nine bodies reported to be in a temple inside the protest site, but rescue workers had so far been unable to get there.

The authorities said late on Wednesday that 27 buildings were set on fire by protestors, including Central World, Southeast Asia's second-biggest department store complex, which was gutted and looked close to collapse. A spokesman for Bangkok's governor said there were 31 fires by Thursday morning, around half at banks but also including a mall in the protest camp area, where a fire had been started around midnight, after the curfew started at 8 p.m. (1300 GMT).

A small fire was started in the stock exchange on Wednesday. The market will be closed on Thursday and Friday and the Bank of Thailand said banks around the country would also stay shut. The whole week has been declared a public holiday in an effort to keep people out of central Bangkok.
The curfew in the capital, in the grip of protests by Red Shirt activists for weeks, was lifted at 6 a.m. (2300 GMT on Wednesday). Buses began running but it was unclear if the mass transit rail system would be reopened. Television channels have been ordered to only air programmes approved by the authorities.

"Guerrilla warfare"

The Red Shirt protestors are mostly drawn from the rural and urban poor and largely back former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, a populist tycoon who was ousted in a 2006 coup and now lives in self-imposed exile to avoid a jail term for graft. They started demonstrating in mid-March, demanding that the government step down and new elections be held. More than 70 people have been killed and nearly 2,000 wounded since then.

Thaksin said the crackdown could spawn guerrilla warfare. "There is a theory saying a military crackdown can spread resentment and these resentful people will become guerrillas," he told Reuters by telephone from an undisclosed location. Early this month, Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva had offered an election in November, just over a year before he needed to call one, but talks foundered and that offer is now off the table.

Troops moved in to clear out the demonstrators early on Wednesday and several Red Shirt leaders surrendered. The security forces continued their operation during the night, authorised to shoot looters and arsonists. "In many places, armed elements have prevented officials from helping the people," Abhisit said in a televised statement late on Wednesday, adding he was determined to end the problem and "return the country to peace and order once again".

Authorities imposed the curfew on 24 provinces -- about a third of the total -- after outbursts of unrest in seven regions, particularly in the north, a Red Shirt stronghold. Town halls were set alight in three northern areas. The protestors say Abhisit lacks a proper mandate after coming to power in a controversial parliamentary vote in 2006 with tacit military support. In Washington, Kurt Campbell, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for East Asia and the Pacific, told reporters talks were planned with Thai diplomats and officials.




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

keep it fresh please, see some outdated stuff
 
Re: BANGKOK: More than 100K at 9pm. Many More Coming. JAMS 50km Long. ArbiSHIT SHITTI

keep it fresh please, see some outdated stuff


YES NO REPLAYS!
ONLY UPDATED NEWS AND PHOTOS.

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


May 20, 2010

Battleground deserted


<!-- by line --> <!-- end by line --> <!--background story, collapse if none--> Where are the tourists?

WHILE not directly affected by the protesters' camp, many other Bangkok businesses had to shut their doors as business dried up along with the tourists. The state Tourism Authority of Thailand has cut its target for tourists in 2010 to 13 million from 15.5 million and slashed its annual revenue target by a fifth to 480 billion baht (S$20.9 billion).

Street hawker Buppha 'Jeab' Yatacoth's T-shirt business has slumped. Before the unrest she'd sell up to 30 a day, making some 3,000 baht. Today she's lucky to sell five and pocket 300 baht. A night curfew forces her to close during her most lucrative hours. 'No tourists come now. Thailand now no good, boom, boom, boom,' she said, imitating the sound of the explosions.

Some of her competitors have abandoned their stalls. Goy, a street noodle vendor in a luxury residential area near the protest site, erected umbrellas to shade a handful of customers on Thursday. 'The only way for this violence to end is to have a new election,' Goy said. A young girl rode her bike past troops to get a bottle of coke and chips from a small shop nearby.

Even Bangkok's notorious red light district is empty. 'I don't know what's going to happen next after the pictures of Bangkok on fire were seen all over the world,' said 'Oy', a worker at a go-go bar. 'Business is going from bad to worse.' -- REUTERS

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A general view shows Rama IV boulevard in downtown Bangkok on May 20, 2010 where traces of burnt barricades and tyres remain. Several people were killed on May 19, 2010 in clashes at a temple declared a "safe zone" in the heart of a Thai anti-government rally site that was shut down in a military offensive. -- PHOTO: AFP

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Thai soldiers patrol the area used as the main stage of the Red Shirt anti-government protesters in the comercial center of Bangkok on May 20, 2010. Thai troops hunted down militants who went on a rampage of arson and looting in Bangkok, after an army crackdown on their anti-government protest camp that ended two months of street rallies. -- PHOTO: AFP

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Thai workers clean roads inside the Red Shirts anti-government protestors camp at the Lumpini Park in Bangkok on May 20, 2010. The top Thai protest leader urged supporters of the anti-government 'Red Shirt' movement to refrain from violence after riots in the capital, saying 'democracy cannot be built on revenge.' -- PHOTO: AFP


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BANGKOK - THE Singha Global Carnival ferris wheel stands idle, the amusement park deserted. The big sign above the gate says 'Fun every day', but not today - Bangkok's central commercial district looks like a charred war zone. Ploenchit Road, where troops and anti-government protesters staged a bloody battle on Wednesday, is blackened from burning tyre barricades. Traffic lights hang like melted street decorations. Stinking rubbish is strewn down a road overlooked by empty, high-rise luxury apartments.

Makeshift tents stand abandoned. For weeks they had been home to thousands of protesters who created a carnival-like atmosphere, dancing and singing at rallies. Military checkpoints have turned one of the capital's ritziest shopping precincts into a no-man's land as some 300 heavily armed armed troops and police begin a final sweep of the district for 'red shirt' protesters and weapons. Businessman Don Bryant and his wife Joy, unable to return to their apartment, take photographs of the destruction from a military checkpoint. Their children Amber Rose and Dylan play among the few bags of clothes and food they have salvaged. 'I am leaving Thailand after 10 years,' said Mr Bryant.

'I am taking my family out of here. We don't want to leave Thailand, but this is a disaster. It's a vibrant, metropolitan, cosmopolitan place - it's an exciting place. Today in my heart, when I looked at Central World, I was devastated.' London fashion designer Frank Johnston arrived in Bangkok a week ago for a shopping holiday. On Thursday he sat at a fast-food restaurant for a last meal before flying home. 'It's just been dire. There's been no shopping, no nightlife,' said Mr Johnston. 'But it's been more of a shock to the locals. Tourists can dodge the bullets and have a story to tell.'

Traffic clogs the roads a short motorbike ride away in old Bangkok. Street hawkers peddle their wares and Western men with young Thai girls walk the street. Life away from the unrest has gone on more or less as normal, albeit sometimes frustratingly with banks, public transport, schools and power shut down temporarily. The Westin Hotel, like other top hotels, has boarded up its glass frontage. A red arrow and sign point to an emergency entrance around the corner. Inside, it's business as usual. -- REUTERS



 
Protests mostly quelled


May 20, 2010

Protests mostly quelled

<!-- by line --> <!-- end by line --> BUT a branch of Siam City Bank was set afire, the first reported arson attack after 39 buildings were torched the day before. According to state-run television, a firefighter was shot and wounded on Thursday while trying to put out the flames at a shopping center. Nation Television reported one person was killed and 14 wounded in the northeastern province of Khon Kaen, one of several provinces where protests erupted on Wednesday.

Col. Sansern said police and army units found a cache of explosives and assault rifles during their sweep against the Red Shirts. City workers on Thursday removed debris and collected piles of garbage left in the streets. With military checkpoints coming down, residents in protest areas were able to leave home to shop. Electricity was restored to some. Col. Sansern said the arson and looting were 'systematically planned and organised' by Red Shirt leaders before they surrendered. He said the military showed restraint. 'If we had the intention to attack civilians, the death toll would have been much higher,' he said.

It was unclear what the next move would be for the protesters who had demanded the ouster of Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva's government and new elections. The protesters, many of them poor farmers or members of the urban underclass, say PM Abhisit came to power illegitimately and is oblivious to their plight. The crackdown should silence the large number of government supporters who were urging a harder line, and the rioting that followed may extinguish some of the widespread sympathy for the protesters' cause.

But that same violence also showed a serious intelligence lapse by the military, and the failure to secure areas of the capital raised doubt over the government's ability to still unrest in the protesters' heartland of the north and northeast. Many Thais feel that any short-term peace may come at the price of polarisation that will lead to years of bitter, cyclical conflict. Thitinan Pongsudhirak, a political scientist from Bangkok's Chulalongkorn University, warned the Red Shirt rampage meant the movement had now entered a stage of armed resistance.

'The problem now is that who does the government talk to?' he said, noting that the Red Shirt leaders had been arrested. Some point to former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted in a 2006 military coup and fled into exile before being sentenced to two years in prison for corruption. The government has accused him of bankrolling the protests and refuses to make any deals with him until he comes back to serve his sentence. 'It is a dark day for Thailand's battered democracy,' Thaksin said in a statement. 'There are questions about my relationship with the Red Shirt movement, and many untrue accusations.' But he added that he 'will continue to morally support the heroic effort' of the movement. Somyot Pruksakasemsuk, a Red Shirt leader, said the movement was not over. 'This is not the end,' he said. 'The crowds will reunite soon.' -- AP


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Troops rooted out small pockets of resistance and residents attempted to return to normal life. -- PHOTO: AP

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BANGKOK (AP) - THE Thai government declared on Thursday it had mostly quelled 10 weeks of violent protests in the capital as buildings still smoldered, troops rooted out small pockets of resistance and residents attempted to return to normal life. But a nighttime curfew was extended in Bangkok and 23 other provinces for three more days. Troops and die-hard anti-government protesters exchanged sporadic fire in parts of the city after the military operation the day before cleared most of a protest encampment in the centre of the capital, leaving 15 dead and 96 wounded.

A special police unit on Thursday led more than a thousand people - many of them women and children - away from a Buddhist temple in the heart of the former 'Red Shirt' protest zone. Six bodies were found on its grounds. The police had the approval of the temple's abbot, but many of the women feared they would be jailed or abused by police and cried or clung to each other as they were led out. Others remained defiant. 'We won. We won. The Red Shirts will rise again,' shouted one woman. Three more Red Shirt leaders surrendered to authorities on Thursday.

Five leaders gave themselves up the day before and were flown to a military camp south of Bangkok for interrogation. 'I'd like to ask all sides to calm down and talk with each other in a peaceful manner,' said Veera Musikapong after being taken into custody on Thursday. 'We cannot create democracy with anger.' Army spokesman Col. Sansern Kawekamnerd said the situation in the capital was mostly under control. -- AP



 
Thailand mops up, but fears of long-term strife


Thailand mops up, but fears of long-term strife
By ERIC TALMADGE Associated Press Writer © 2010 The Associated Press
May 20, 2010, 10:55AM


BANGKOK — As soldiers mopped up pockets of resistance and the government declared it was back in control, fears grew Thursday that the tentative quiet restored to Thailand's capital after a bloody crackdown on protests may just be a respite from violence and political polarization that could continue for years.

Leaders of the anti-government Red Shirt movement vowed a return as they were taken into custody. "I think this is a new beginning for the Red Shirts," said Kevin Hewison, a Thailand expert at the University of North Carolina. "It will be a darker and grimmer time of struggle and less-focused activities. By no stretch of the imagination is the movement finished."

The Thai government declared Thursday it had mostly quelled 10 weeks of violent protests in the capital as buildings smoldered, troops rooted out die-hard holdouts and some residents cautiously attempted a return to normal life a day after a military operation cleared the main commercial district of thousands of demonstrators, leaving 15 dead and nearly 100 injured.

Troops roamed the city on foot and in Humvees and exchanged gunfire with scattered Red Shirt holdouts, who fought near the city's Victory Monument and torched a bank, bringing to 40 the number of buildings set aflame after the military push sent the protesters retreating from their demonstration site.
The protesters, demanding elections, had fortified themselves behind tire-and-bamboo-spike barricades.

Thailand's finance ministry estimated the economic damage to the country at 50 billion baht ($1.5 billion). Continued security concerns led officials to extend a nighttime curfew in Bangkok and 23 other provinces for three more days. Even so, army spokesman Col. Sansern Kaewkamnerd said the government was in charge. "Overall, we have the situation under control," he said. Residents, meanwhile, moved carefully to resume their routines.

With military checkpoints closing, city workers removed debris and collected piles of garbage left in the streets. Residents in protest areas were able to leave home to shop. Electricity was restored in many areas. But many of those who ventured into the streets were still deeply shaken by the violence. "This really worries me — this shouldn't happen to Thailand," said Somjit Suksumrain, a construction company manager. "Thailand should not end up like this." By late Thursday, authorities had taken into custody most of the senior Red Shirt leaders.

Three surrendered Thursday after five others gave themselves up the previous day and were flown to a military camp south of Bangkok for interrogation. "I'd like to ask all sides to calm down and talk with each other in a peaceful manner," Veera Musikapong said after being taken into custody Thursday. "We cannot create democracy with anger." Not all were as conciliatory. Somyot Pruksakasemsuk, another Red Shirt leader, said the movement was simply regrouping. "Initially, independent movements of the masses in Bangkok and the regions will begin, then riots will ensue," he said. "For Thailand in the long term, there will be major changes due to the crisis of faith."

The government described the mayhem as organized terrorism. Officials also said the arson and looting after the troops quashed the main protest were "anticipated aftershocks" that did not represent deeper trouble. Still, government spokesman Panithan Wattanayagorn acknowledged the protesters had sympathizers among the broader populace, and said the rioting was sparked by disappointment, hopelessness and anger. But he said it was only as large as it was because of "prior organized planning."

The Red Shirts had demanded the ouster of Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva's government and new elections. The protesters, many of them poor farmers or members of the urban underclass, say Abhisit came to power illegitimately and is oblivious to their plight. Analysts said Abhisit was under increased pressure to hold early elections.

"Abhisit still has to hold elections by next year, and he could be under pressure still to do it earlier, by his original November offer," said Paul Handley, the author of a biography of Thailand's king. "Thailand still needs to hit this reset button. ... Even if Abhisit's government is technically legal, the Reds' widespread perception that it is illegitimate remains."

The crackdown should silence the large number of government supporters who were urging a harder line, and the rioting that followed may extinguish some of the widespread sympathy for the protesters' cause. But the government's failure to secure areas of the capital raised doubts about its ability to calm unrest in the protesters' heartland of the north and northeast.

The role of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra also remains a question mark. He was ousted in a 2006 military coup and fled into exile before being sentenced to two years in prison for corruption and many Red Shirts want him back. The government has accused him of bankrolling the protests and refuses to make any deals with him until he serves his sentence.

"It is a dark day for Thailand's battered democracy," Thaksin said in a statement distributed by his Canadian lawyer. "There are questions about my relationship with the Red Shirt movement, and many untrue accusations." But he added that he "will continue to morally support the heroic effort" of the movement.

___

Associated Press writers Thanyarat Doksone and Grant Peck contributed to this report. Additional research by Warangkana Tempati.



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

The real source of trouble behind Thailand's current problems. very interesting and informative.

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

YES NO REPLAYS!
ONLY UPDATED NEWS AND PHOTOS.


LOL, talk cock sia, ask people to post new pictures and news, you go post a Youtube videos with no credibilities, a video in 2007 somemore, whahahahaha :D:D:D

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

LATEST....to be viewed after viewing above 2007 video

<object width="480" height="385">


<embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/a-PPpGScujQ&hl=en_US&fs=1&" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="480" height="385"></object>
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Thai army says central Bangkok to be secured within hours


Thai army says central Bangkok to be secured within hours
Posted: 21 May 2010 1243 hrs

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Thai soldiers taking up position near an anti-government protest site in Bangkok.
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BANGKOK : Thailand's army said Friday that an operation to secure central Bangkok will be completed by 0800 GMT as it worked to crush pockets of resistance after the closure of anti-government rallies.

"The security clearance on the ground is complete around the Ratchaprasong area," said army spokesman Colonel Sunsern Kaewkumnerd, referring to a strategic intersection occupied by protesters for six weeks.

"But at 10 high-rise buildings including hotels, apartments, and a hospital, the security clearance will be completed by 3pm and will be handed over to the Bangkok authority by 6pm," he said in a televised address.

The army had warned that armed militants were operating from high-rise buildings in the area after going on the rampage Wednesday, enraged by a military offensive that forced their leaders to surrender.

Sunsern said that military and police will continue to operate security checkpoints in Bangkok.

"Utility services such as power, water, public transportation in the area will be fully restored," he said, after services were cut during the chaos. - AFP/jy






 
Secret detention of Thai protesters could bring abuses: HRW


Secret detention of Thai protesters could bring abuses: HRW
Posted: 21 May 2010 1146 hrs

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A Thai solder removes red flags inside a Red Shirt camp in downtown Bangkok.
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BANGKOK : A leading international human rights agency expressed alarm Friday that Thai authorities have used a "draconian" emergency decree passed during political violence to hold prisoners in secret detention. New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) said it was concerned anti-government "Red Shirt" protesters were vulnerable to mistreatment after they were arrested by Thai security forces and taken to undisclosed locations without being charged.

"Secret detention sites and unaccountable officials are a recipe for human rights abuses," said Elaine Pearson, acting Asia director for Human Rights Watch in a statement. "Those arrested should be promptly brought before a judge and charged with a criminal offence or released," she added. The government arrested eight "Red Shirt" leaders and many of their supporters this week when the army moved to disperse thousands of protesters from their sprawling encampment in Bangkok's main commercial district.

Since the Red Shirts began street rallies in mid-March 83 people including two foreign journalists have been killed in clashes and blasts, and 1,800 injured. As dozens of buildings lay in ruins after the military crackdown, Human Rights Watch expressed "alarm" at reports the emergency decree's broad powers were being used to secretly hold people in military camps instead of jails.

The organisation said the risk of "disappearances," torture and other abuses was significantly increased when detainees are held incommunicado by the military, which lacks civilian law enforcement training. The organisation this week accused both Thai security forces and Red Shirts of "serious abuses" during the Bangkok crackdown. -AFP/jy




 
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