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1 dead, four people shot at Ramkhamhaeng University after clashes


george

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More than 20,000 policemen, Army to be deployed to defend 10 sites from protesters today

BANGKOK: -- More than 21,000 police will guard key state offices including Government House today, when anti-government protesters plan to take control of 10 targeted locations, as part of their "fight to uproot the Thaksin regime".

The government's Centre for the Administration of Peace and Order (CAPO) and the Metropolitan Police will deploy 21,550 policemen in and around government offices in Bangkok, including Government House and Parliament, a police source said.

At the request of the CAPO, soldiers from Thailand's three-armed forces will be sent today to help police deal with protesters attempting to occupy government offices in the capital, a high-ranking source in the military said. The unarmed troops will be responsible for preventing damage to state property and government offices, the source said, adding that they would not confront protesters.

"Soldiers will assist the police, but police will still be at the forefront of operations. Troops will not man checkpoints or patrol the streets," the source added. The prime minister yesterday also confirmed that unarmed soldiers would help with maintaining peace and order in certain areas.

The CAPO yesterday ordered closure of 14 road sections around Government House and Parliament and declared areas around the Royal Thai Police headquarters, Police Hospital and Chulalongkorn Hospital off-limits for protesters.

Metropolitan Police chief Maj-General Camronvit Toopkrajank chaired a meeting yesterday about security measures for the compounds, in preparation for the planned occupations. Participants including many senior police were informed about crowd-control measures and suppression of a protest - in line with international standards.

The Metropolitan Police chief prohibited all staff against taking leave at this time until further notice, the source said. About 50 fire extinguishers were distributed to different divisions of the Metropolitan Police in case of fire, according to the source.

Some 8,400 policemen would be deployed to guard Government House, Parliament and the Metropolitan Police Bureau, another police source said. Protest leader Suthep Thauguban, who is also secretary-general of the newly-formed People's Democratic Reform Committee, did not name Parliament among the 10 state offices the protesters will try to seize control of today.

Deputy Metropolitan Police commissioner Maj-General Samroeng Suwanpong said yesterday police would "seriously enforce" the Internal Security Act (ISA) against any protester attempting to enter Government House, Parliament and other key government offices. The authorities would focus on negotiations with protesters but would not allow them to trespass into a government office, CAPO spokesman Police Maj-General Piya Uthayo said yesterday.

"It is now clear that the protests are not peaceful. It is illegal to trespass into government offices. Also, weapons have been found at protest sites," Piya said. "Police will not allow protesters to trespass into important government offices, including Government House, Parliament and Royal Thai Police headquarters, as running of the country will be affected," he said.

"All the measures taken will be in line with the international standards. The focus will be on negotiation."

He said that the CAPO was pleased to have representatives from human rights organisations, academia and the media to observe the police's handling of the protesters.

Many government offices in Bangkok, which is now under the ISA, have been guarded by thousands of police and surrounded by concrete barriers and barbed-wire fences.

Crowd-control equipment such as batons, shields, teargas canisters, and vehicles equipped with long range acoustic devices and high-pressure water jets have also been spotted inside compounds. The police's preparation came as Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra yesterday ruled out the use of violence to tackle the protests.

"Today, we choose to be condemned as a weak government, not using force and being invaded by protesters," the prime minister said in a television broadcast. "It is better than setting a deadline to regain our ground and leading to people's suffering," she said.

The numbers of anti- and pro-government demonstrators have "increased continuously" yesterday, according to CAPO deputy spokesman Maj-General Anuch Romayanand. He said police were deployed at Ramkhamhaeng University, which is adjacent to Rajamangala Stadium, where the red shirts were gathering in support of the government, in an attempt to prevent violence.

He claimed there had been attempts to create violence between both sides. Peace advocates urged both sides yesterday to avoid violence. Gothom Arya, director of Mahidol University's Research Centre for Peace Building, said that conflict should not lead to violence, as it could cause death.
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-- The Nation 2013-12-01
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a little too late for that step ...

one shot while army personal is on duty and they'll come back with loaded weapons, - as always.

Better to investigate the root cause. Will they?

The sport center was used by thousands of students every day and they instigated deadly violence against them ... reason enough to get tough on those who are behind it. Lots of truthful hints in the other thread.

I also don't think that the students broke the gate at the closed-by University either. They were hunted down by some thugs for which I have enough reasons, pointed out some suspects and to believe of what I have witnessed, seen by myself and heard during the last ten days.

Keep politics aside and clear the high crime committed and students will have peace. Don't let this issue in the open, youngsters now want and need answers.

Edited by wealth
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Four people shot at Ramkhamhaeng University after clashes
The Sunday Nation:

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BANGKOK: -- At least four people were injured in Ramkhamhaeng University yesterday evening after gunshots were heard. The drama was thought to be related to clashes earlier with red-shirts from the nearby Rajamongala Stadium.

Meanwhile, the Centre for the Administration of Peace and Order (CAPO) has announced the closure of Ramkhamhaeng Road from Ramkhamhaeng to Lam Sali Intersection, after violence in the area.

Earlier in the afternoon, dozens of protesters in an anti-red shirt rally harassed men near the university by blowing whistles at them. The red shirts are holding a rally to support the government at the stadium.

Some protesters beat on a taxi transporting red shirts with their fists and sticks and later some protesters threw rocks and beat a passing public bus.

A group of men also showed their opposition to the reds by setting a red T-shirt on fire, then stamping on it.

These incidents prompted RU rector Assoc Prof Wuttisak Larpcharoensap to order all the protesting RU students to go back into the university compound.

The rector said a number of men on motorcycles from the stadium had provoked the protesters earlier.

There was a fistfight and one student got minor injury, according to a reporter with the pro-Democrats' Blue Sky TV network at the scene.

Hundreds of Ramkhamhaeng University students yesterday joined in an anti-red shirts rally in front of the university, after a female student was attacked by the red shirts because she wore a whistle necklace.

The protesters set up stage at about noon. After representatives from Hua Mark and Wang Thonglang police stations came to receive their petition on the case and protesters were seeing them off, a fistfight between two men and a group of the protesters began. Protest leaders and police tried to break them up.

While inbound Ramkhamhaeng Soi 61 had been already blocked, police later set up barricades to separate the two groups.

Meanwhile, red-shirts from several provinces were mobilised yesterday to join the Bangkok rally, including from Udon Thani, Nakhon Ratchasima, Kalasin, Pathum Thani and Phitsanulok.

Red-shirt leader Thida Thawornseth yesterday told a pro-government rally at Rajamangala Stadium that the red shirts should not allow the protesters to overthrow an elected government.

More protesters coming

Udon Thani red-shirt leader Kwanchai Praipana, who is bringing 1,500 people on board 20 buses to Bangkok, claimed that former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra on Friday phoned and asked him to mobilise supporters.

A leading red-shirt in Nakhon Ratchasima's Muang district, Somphot Prasartthai, said at least 1,500 reds from Muang district were registered to board 15 buses and 20 vans.

He said that at least 13,000 people from the province’s 32 districts would be mobilised to Bangkok and would remain until they had victory over the anti-government protesters. He said they would not use violence but were keen to show that there were as many people in support of the government.

Kalasin red-shirts also yesterday mobilised 3,000 people to support the Yingluck government along with other reds in Bangkok, Kalasin area 3 red-shirt coordinator Pian Donpanya said.

In Phitsanulok, 20 buses carrying over 500 red-shirts departed at 9am to join the Bangkok rally, while 1,500 reds were coming from Muang district in Pathum Thani also.

Suthep Thaugsuban, key leader of the anti-Thaksin regime campaign, has called for more supporters to come to Bangkok particularly from the South.

In Satun's Muang district, former People's Alliance for Democracy protester Udomsri Chantharassami hosted a "tea party campaign to aid the nation", serving people with "Patongko" deep-fried dough sticks, fermented rice noodles and rice noodle with coconut milk at a field in tambon Khlong Khud, to raise funds for her group's travel expenses to join the Bangkok rally. And inChumphon, demonstrators outside city hall said they had prepared 15 buses to take volunteers to join the Bangkok rally.

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-- The Nation 2013-12-01

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just watched the SHORT time that the ABC here in Aus allocated and it was YL saying how it will damage the Kingdom and if they love TH stop everything, the rest was dedicated to how the red shirts are hard done by, impartial reporting??

Edited by briboy
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I doubt anybody could have predicted that bussing in thousands of amped-up red shirts could have led to violence occurring. Sad and surprising in equal measures. It is also a shame that Yingluck will be presumably arrested and charged for premeditated murder in a personal capacity.

Huh? I am scratching my head on this.

Thousands of Red shirts and Thousands of yellowshirts

Tempers starting to flare up

Government property seized

Military and police presence

History of violence

Prolonged period of demonstrations

Ok...nobody can predict that somebody might get hurt?

I was expecting free coffee and donuts for all.

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All this because one evil man - Suthep - wants to escape a court appearance for mass murder. He is prepared to destroy his country to escape justice - clearly the most evil & repugnant man in post-war Thai history. Reports now coming in on news thread that the guns-for-hire yellow fascists bussed in to cause mayhem & terror have now shot & killed some pro-democracy red protesters. The Yellows are fascist terrorists, no more no less, being manipulated by this monster trying to escape justice - and Bangkok may burn because of him.

Please link to the news thread post that says that any of the protesters that were bused in were anywhere near Rajamangala stadium. Unless you're talking about the red shirts that were bused in.

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