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Three months of anti-government rallies in Thailand - Chronology


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Three months of anti-government rallies in Thailand - Chrono



BANGKOK, February 14, 2014 (AFP) - The following is a timeline of key events in Thailand's political crisis since demonstrations aimed at toppling Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra's government began more than three months ago:



October 31: Protests break out against an amnesty bill which critics said was aimed at allowing former premier Thaksin Shinawatra -- Yingluck's brother -- to return without going to jail for a corruption conviction.



November 1: The lower house of parliament, which is dominated by the ruling party, votes in favour of the bill.



November 11: Amid growing outrage on the streets, the upper house overwhelmingly rejects the legislation.



November 25: Opposition supporters march on state buildings, occupying the finance ministry.



November 26: Protesters besiege several ministries while police issue an arrest warrant for rally leader Suthep Thaugsuban.



November 30: Opposition demonstrators attack a bus carrying government supporters. Several people are killed and dozens wounded in street violence.



December 1: Police use water cannon and tear gas on protesters who storm the government and police headquarters.



December 8: Opposition lawmakers resign en masse from parliament.



December 9: Yingluck calls early elections. Opposition later announces boycott.



December 22: Protesters stage massive anti-government rally in Bangkok. Police say 150,000 people attend but organisers insist the number is much higher.



December 26: The government rejects a call from the Election Commission to postpone the ballot after violent clashes



December 27: The army chief refuses to rule out a coup, saying "anything can happen".



December 28: An unknown gunman kills one protester and wounds several others -- the start of a series of drive-by shootings targeting demonstrators.



January 13: Tens of thousands of protesters occupy major streets in the capital in an attempt to "shut down" Bangkok.



January 16: Anti-corruption authorities probe possible negligence of duty by Yingluck over a controversial rice subsidy scheme.



January 17: A grenade wounds dozens at an opposition march, the first of several blasts targeting the rallies. One of the injured later dies.



January 21: Government declares a 60-day state of emergency in Bangkok and surrounding areas.



January 26: A protest leader is shot dead while giving a speech, as fellow demonstrators disrupt advance voting for the election.



February 1: A daylight gun battle shakes Bangkok as pro- and anti-government protesters clash.



February 2: Demonstrators prevent 10,000 polling stations from opening for the election, affecting several million people.



February 11: The election commission says election re-runs will be held on April 27 in constituencies where voting was obstructed.



February 12: The Constitutional Court rejects a legal bid by the opposition to annul the polls.



February 14: Thousands of riot police are deployed in Bangkok to reclaim government buildings surrounded by demonstrators.



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-- (c) Copyright AFP 2014-02-14


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The time line is bound to get longer , what is recorded will have a strong bearing on the direction Thailand will take, whatever ,the stakes are high , the consequences are up to the players in the game , their decisions will be the map of either a failed country or a modern democracy , knowing the players , the former will prevail coffee1.gif

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Much of this will be wiped out of Thai history as they typically do. It favors neither side. The sitting government/caretaker government did nothing to prevent the commandeering of their facilities and the nation's economy. The protesters look like fools demanding a "people's council" of 185 designated insiders to run the country.

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