Protesters surround Pheu Thai HQ, enter Royal Thai Army building

Anti-government protesters shout slogans in front of the national police headquarters yesterday. (AFP/Nicolos Asfouri)

 

Protesters have surrounded the headquarters of the ruling party and stormed those of the Royal Thai Army today, intensifying their bid to topple the embattled Thai government.

Hundreds of police were deployed on Friday at Thailand’s ruling party headquarters as defiant opposition protesters set their sights on new high-profile targets.

Boisterous demonstrators have besieged key ministries in Bangkok in the biggest street protests since mass rallies against the previous government three years ago degenerated into the kingdom’s worst civil strife in decades.

The protesters – a mix of royalists, southerners and the urban middle class sometimes numbering in their tens of thousands – are united by their loathing of former premier Thaksin Shinawatra.

The controversial former telecoms tycoon was ousted in a coup in 2006 and lives in self-imposed exile, but he is widely believed to be the real power behind the embattled government of his younger sister, Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra.

Protesters are demanding the end of the “Thaksin regime” and want to replace the government with an unelected “people’s council.”

Demonstrators announced on Friday they would march to the headquarters of Yingluck’s Pheu Thai party, a day after cutting off the electricity to the national police headquarters in Bangkok, in their latest act of provocation against a key symbol of authority.

The move came just hours after Yingluck and her party easily won a parliamentary no confidence vote.

“We are deploying two companies of police (around 300 officers) at Puea Thai party headquarters after they asked for protection,” deputy national police chief Worapong Siewpreecha told AFP.

With their spirits buoyed by free food and a party atmosphere, demonstrators have massed at several locations around the capital, including outside many major government buildings.

Their numbers have fallen sharply since an estimated crowd of up to 180,000 people joined an opposition rally on Sunday.

The turnout is expected to spike again over the weekend as organisers seek a final push ahead of celebrations for revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej’s birthday on Dec. 5, which are traditionally marked in an atmosphere of calm and respect.

The carnival-like mood at the rallies masks deep divisions in Thai society that have erupted into political bloodshed on several occasions since Thaksin’s overthrow.

While the latest demos have been largely peaceful, a minor clash broke out Thursday between pro- and anti-government supporters in the province of Pathum Thani on the northern outskirts of Bangkok, police said.

“Two anti-government supporters suffered minor injuries. They might have been hit with a wooden stick,” said provincial police commander Major General Smithi Mukdasanit.

A minor confrontation between the two sides was also reported in the northeastern province of Mahasarakam although nobody was injured.

Thaksin remains a hugely divisive figure seven years after he was deposed by royalist generals. Pro-Thaksin parties have won every election for more than a decade.

He is adored by many of the country’s rural and urban working class but hated by many southerners, middle-class Thais and the Bangkok elite, who see him as corrupt and a threat to the monarchy.

In a televised address on Thursday, Yingluck urged demonstrators to call off their protesters and said the government did not want confrontation.But a defiant rally leader, Suthep Thaugsuban, rejected any suggestion of talks in a tub-thumping late night speech that set a fresh deadline for the demos to reach their climax.

“Yingluck said the government can still govern, can still work — I want to say that they will only be able to work for a few more days, then we will not let them work anymore,” he told several thousand supporters in Bangkok.

The protests snowballed after the ruling party tried to introduce an amnesty that could have allowed Thaksin’s return from self-imposed exile, and the rallies have continued despite a Senate move to reject the bill.

Yingluck on Monday ordered special security measures to be expanded to cover all of the capital, although she has ruled out using force against the demonstrators. 

Story: Apilaporn Vechakij/AFP

Graphic: AFP

 

From Twitter user khwan_nna, this image from 12:25pm of protesters entering the headquarters of the Royal Thai Army:

 

[[{“type”:”media”,”view_mode”:”media_original”,”fid”:”35506″,”attributes”:{“alt”:””,”class”:”media-image”,”height”:”503″,”style”:”display: block; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;”,”typeof”:”foaf:Image”,”width”:”600″}}]]



Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Big mistake by Thailand's Democrat party.

    Bigger mistake is to allow Suthep Thaugsuban to be a part of them, and commit illegal acts like occupying government ministries. Suthep Thaugsuban is asking for replacement of a properly elected government with his own mob rule – the so-called People's Council. Well, this is not new. In nearby Cambodia, they had that once before – it is called the Khmer Rouge that carried out the Killing Fields. The mob leader does remind one of the Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot.

    Biggest mistake is Abhisit and Korn Chatikavanij actually went to US and UK embassies and ask the FOREIGN powers to help bring down Thailand's properly elected Thai government. In my book this is treason. And they asked the people with the guns – the Thai Military to help their cause – but wisely the Thai Military told them to go away. How can the Democrat party live up to its name.

Leave A Reply


BECOME A COCO+ MEMBER

Support local news and join a community of like-minded
“Coconauts” across Southeast Asia and Hong Kong.

Join Now
Coconuts TV
Our latest and greatest original videos
Subscribe on