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May 15, 2010

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Gunfire rattles Thai capital, 8 killed

THAI troops fired bullets at anti-government protesters, and explosions thundered in the heart of Bangkok yesterday as an army push to clear the streets and end a two-month political standoff sparked clashes that have killed eight and wounded 101.

As night fell, booming explosions and the sound of gunfire rattled around major intersections in the central business district. Local TV reported that several grenades hit a shopping center and an elevated rail station. Plumes of black smoke hung over the neighborhood as tires burned in eerily empty streets while onlookers ducked for cover.

With security deteriorating and hopes of a peaceful resolution to the standoff increasingly unlikely, what was once one of Southeast Asia's most stable democracies and magnets of foreign investment has been thrust deep into political uncertainty. The crisis threatens its stability, economy and already decimated tourism industry.

Violence escalated after a leading military adviser to the Red Shirt protesters was shot in the head on Thursday evening, possibly by a sniper. A doctor said Khattiya Sawasdiphol was still in a coma yesterday and could "die at any moment."

Clashes since then have killed eight and wounded 101, officials said. Among those wounded were two Thai journalists and a Canadian reporter, who was in a serious condition.

"We are being surrounded. We are being crushed. The soldiers are closing in on us. This is not a civil war yet, but it's very, very cruel," Weng Tojirakarn, a protest leader, said.

Fighting has now killed 37 people and injured hundreds since the Red Shirts, mostly rural poor, began camping in the capital on March 12, in a bid to force out Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva.

Last week, Abhisit offered November elections, raising hopes that a compromise could be reached with the Red Shirts, who have been demanding immediate elections. Those hopes were dashed after Red Shirt leaders made more demands.

Late on Thursday, the army moved to seal off the Red Shirt encampment in an upscale commercial district of the capital. Some 10,000 protesters, women and children among them, have crammed into the area.

"Our policy is not to disperse the protesters," government spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn said late yesterday.

He said their mission was to set up checkpoints and "tighten" the area around the protest, but "there have been attempts to agitate the officers."

In a later speech on national TV, Panitan said security forces hadn't entered the demonstration area but were attacked and forced to protect themselves. He said security efforts would be stepped up in the coming days and "many areas would be under control soon." As he said that, a large explosion rang out in central Bangkok.

Yesterday's violence was initially centered on a small area home to several foreign embassies, including those of the United States and Japan which were forced to close, but by mid-afternoon had spread around the 3-square-kilometer protest zone barricaded with bamboo stakes and tires.

The British, New Zealand and the Dutch embassies, which are in the vicinity, also were shut.

It was not known who shot Khattiya, better known by the nickname Seh Daeng. But the Red Shirts blamed a government sniper.




 

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