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Yellow Shirts Expect 100.000 People At Bangkok Rally


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What is it about this magic number 100,000 that's always quoted.... is it supposed to be lucky or something?

It's the same of the 40,000 Thai workers that the government were going to rescue from Libya and the 42,000 that they said they were going to rescue from Syria lol.

Never heard of even one of the Jumbo jets that made it back to Thailand. I suppose the Thai workers all died in the crossfire Lol

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"The letter accuses the five judges of violating Article 157 of the Constitution and lacking ethics."

"Article 157 of the Criminal Code states that any state official who “wrongfully exercises, or fails to exercise his functions, to the injury of any person, shall be punished with imprisonment of one to ten years, or fined of 2,000-20,000 baht, or both”.

"The party plans to hold a meeting tomorrow to make its MPs understand the gist of the party's open letter outlining its refusal to accept the Constitutional Court's authority and why the court should not take up the case on the revision of Article 68."

The CC seems to be doing its mandated function in accord with the constitution, however, the PTP would have a case to answer under article 157.

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UPDATE:

Yellows stay as reds head to Parliament

Anuphan Chantana,

Chanikarn Phumhiran,

Tanatpong Kongsai

The Nation

BANGKOK: -- After staging a sit-in demonstration for 17 days, the red shirts yesterday announced the end of their protest after a rally motorcade from the Constitutional Court to Parliament to call for the impeachment of five judges who've accepted to hear a petition against the amendment of Article 68 of the Constitution.

Although the red shirts announced they would mobilise up to 100,000 protesters, not as many turned up early though more joined in after the rally got underway at 9.30am.

Meanwhile, hundreds of yellow-shirt Thai Compatriots and Territory Protection Front members, gathering since Tuesday at Sanam Luang, are refusing to clear the site.

They say they will stay until Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra is ousted and that their presence won't interfere with Royal Ploughing Ceremony on the grounds next Monday.

The red-shirt community radio group leaders yesterday jointly read a statement saying they would take recourse in accordance with Article 274 of the Constitution to seek the impeachment of five Constitutional Court judges - Jaran Pukditanakul, Charoon Intachan, Chalermpon Ake-uru, Nurak Marpraneet and Suphot Khaimuk.

They are opposed to the court's agreeing to consider a petition filed by Senator Somjet Bunthanom over the amendment of Article 68.

In a motorcade, which included motorcycles, pickup tracks, buses and personal cars, the red-shirt protesters rallied from the Constitutional Court to Parliament, where they filed a petition with the House Speaker.

The red-shirt leaders submitted two letters to Deputy Senate Speaker Surachai Liengbunler-schai, one supporting the 312 MPs and senators moving to amend the Constitution and the other signed by 20,000 people seeking impeachment of the Constitutional Court judges.

The letter accuses the five judges of violating Article 157 of the Constitution and lacking ethics.

Red-shirt leader Pongpisit Kongsena Pongpisit said he would bring to Parliament a list of 50,000 people who joined the campaign to oust the five judges within 15 days.

He added that red shirts would disperse now that they have completed their mission.

Around noon, a woman in her 30s dressed in black lambasted the media near the rally stage opposite Parliament.

One of the red shirts shouted out that she was not a red shirt, causing others to flock to her.

Red-shirt guards rushed to remove her from the scene as others tried to assault her physically. The woman fled in one of the buses that carried the red shirts to Parliament, before she was pulled out and hit in the head.

She screamed in pain and with the help of the red-shirt guards managed to take shelter in a government building.

Yellow-shirt leader Chaiwat Sinsuwong said his group had considered a police request to vacate Sanam Luang but resolved to stay until Yingluck is ousted. He said he expected 100,000 protesters by this weekend.

They are also demonstrating to offer moral support to the Constitutional Court judges and oppose the Preah Vihear court case.

Monday's Royal Ploughing Ceremony is for farmers, many of whom support protesters in Chaiwat's group. Chaiwat said his group would adjust its protest to accommodate the ceremony and join in the annual rite, which marks the start of the rice-planting season.

"We will stay until the government goes. Once it does, we will go home. Our protest will not move to the Constitutional Court as we respect other people's rights.

"If we go there, a clash [with the red shirts and others] would happen and that would be as some people want. [They are looking for] riots and a military coup. So we will stay here to confirm our stance," Chaiwat said.

Deputy Bangkok Governor Pol General Assawin Kwanmuang yesterday met former Yasothorn senator Sombun Thongburan who led yellow shirts from Nakhon Ratchasima to the Sanam Luang rally. Assawin asked Chaiwat to leave the site because the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration must get the grounds ready for the ploughing ceremony.

nationlogo.jpg

-- The Nation 2013-05-09

Edited by visionchaser45
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Does the 100,000th person through the gates get a prize? If so, i hope its not a sack of rice. The last sack we had come down from isan was crap. Goes off in one day when normally you can re heat the day after. Rice seems to go all gluggy. Maybe theyre exporting all the best rice.

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