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Wednesday, 19 May 2010 - Thai protest leaders surrender after deadly clashes |
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    Edition: U.S. Article Comments (17) Slideshow Video Save Email Print Reprints Most Popular Most Shared Euro skids, shares tumble on German ban | Video 2:21am EDT Disgruntled voters take down veteran senator 1:38am EDT Thai protest leaders surrender after deadly clashes | Video 3:22am EDT "Savagely beaten" Stanford asks to be freed 18 May 2010 Big powers agree on Iran sanctions draft | Video 18 May 2010 Lincoln loses leverage on US financial reform bill 1:07am EDT German ban on risky bets seen backfiring 12:29am EDT WRAPUP 7-Gulf Coast fears spreading slick, fishing ban widens 18 May 2010 Study suggests processed meat a real health risk 17 May 2010 U.S. reverses stance on treaty to regulate arms trade 14 Oct 2009 Study suggests processed meat a real health risk 17 May 2010 Pesticides tied to ADHD in children in U.S. study 17 May 2010 U.S. reverses stance on treaty to regulate arms trade 14 Oct 2009 Disgruntled voters take down veteran senator 1:38am EDT Thai protest leaders surrender after deadly clashes | Video 3:22am EDT Euro skids, shares tumble on German ban | Video 2:21am EDT Thai crackdown may spark "guerrilla war": Thaksin 18 May 2010 Euro hits 4-year low vs. dollar after German regulation 1:33am EDT Canadian working women campaign for 25-hour day 18 May 2010 Drug-resistant TB risk demands push for new drugs 18 May 2010 Thai protest leaders surrender after deadly clashes Adrees Latif and Damir Sagolj BANGKOK Wed May 19, 2010 3:22am EDT Related News Thai protesters calm as battle raged to an end 3:22am EDT Thai army says situation under control at protest site 3:13am EDT Grenades wound soldiers, Canadian reporter in Bangkok 2:48am EDT Thailand's top four banks to close all Bangkok branches 12:58am EDT Related Video Thai protest leader agrees to talks Tue, May 18 2010 Thai protest death toll rises < 1 / 47 > View Full Size BANGKOK (Reuters) - Four senior Thai anti-government protest leaders surrendered to police on Wednesday after troops stormed their encampment, sparking clashes that killed at least four people, as violence rocked other areas of the city. World  |  Thailand Using armored vehicles and firing semi-automatic weapons from an overpass, soldiers made an early morning advance on an area occupied for more than six weeks by thousands "red shirt" demonstrators in Bangkok's commercial heart. As they moved close to the main protest site, top protest leaders offered to surrender on the main stage as supporters urged them to fight on, many screaming and crying as gun fire rang out nearby. Moments later, live television showed the four in police custody, urging supporters to go home. The army spokesman said in a television broadcast the protest site was under army control and the military had halted operations. As the leaders were surrendering, three grenades exploded outside the main protest site, badly wounding two soldiers and a foreign journalist, a Reuters witness said. Protesters were also burning tires in other areas of the city. Government spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn said the military had successfully gained control of the Lumpini Park area south of the protest site. Unrest was spreading to other areas of Thailand. Protesters also stormed a town hall complex in the northeastern city of Udon Thani, setting a building ablaze. Three journalists were among 50 people wounded and one Western journalist, identified as an Italian was killed, a hospital said. Troops and armored vehicles broke through three-meter-high barricades of tires and bamboo in an operation to squeeze thousands of anti-government protesters from their fortified camp in central Bangkok. Troops fired tear gas and automatic rifles at the red-shirted protesters but halted the advance before reaching a stage where an estimated 3,000 demonstrators were rallying. Two bodies were found on Ratchadamri Road, which leads to the main protest site after troops followed the army vehicle into the encampment, a Reuters witness said. They appeared to have been shot. The "red shirts" fired back, witnesses said. BLACK SMOKE Protesters ignited walls of tires as the troops arrived, causing thick black smoke to billow high over skyscrapers and hiding thousands of demonstrators who have occupied the heart of Bangkok's commercial district for more than six weeks. Protesters have already taken over intersections at two other places in the capital of 15 million people, one of the world's more popular urban tourist destinations. The mostly rural and urban poor protestors broadly support former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, a graft-convicted populist billionaire ousted in a 2006 coup and living in self-imposed exile to avoid jail. Thaksin raised the specter of insurrection in a telephone interview with Reuters on Wednesday. "There is a theory saying a military crackdown can spread resentment and these resentful people will become guerrillas," he said, but declined to say where he was speaking from. He denied an accusation by a top aide of Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva that he was the stumbling block for failed talks between the government and the "red shirt" leaders. The military offensive came a day after the collapse of a proposal for talks aimed at ending five days of chaotic street fighting that descended into urban warfare that killed 39 people and wounded more than 300. Two buildings were on fire on the periphery of the protest encampment, a bank and a government building. The red shirts accuse the British-born, Oxford-educated Abhisit of lacking a popular mandate after coming to power in a controversial parliamentary vote in 2008 with tacit backing from the military. They have demanded immediate elections. Troops over the past few days had thrown a cordon around the protest site, a "tent city" at the Rachaprasong intersection, paralyzing the heart of Bangkok. Hundreds of women and children have taken refuge in a temple inside the protest area. Protesters have stockpiled food, water, and supplies in the encampment since Thursday when the assassination of a major-general allied to the red shirts, and an army operation to pressure them, sparked the latest wave of violence that has killed 68 people and wounded more than 1,700 since the demonstrations began in mid-March. (Additional reporting by Nopporn Wong-Anan, Michael Perry and Ambika Ahuja; Writing by Jason Szep; Editing by Bill Tarrant) World Thailand Comments See All Comments (17)  |  Post Comment May 18, 2010 9:47pm EDT About time, the redshirts need to go. paperburn Report As Abusive     May 18, 2010 10:05pm EDT I would suggest that all international journalists study the last verdict on Thaksin Shinnawatra. That pronouncement has detailed many of the authority abusing and law violation of Thaksin Shinnawatra in enriching himself while serving as the prime minister of Thailand. When the details of this ousted prime minister’s crimes and acts is understood, then you would be in a much better position to understand the current disorder in Thailand. One of the biggest mistake made by almost all foreign presses had been their statements that “The protesters support former prime minister Thaksin Shinnawatra.” The fact is that these protesters and all of the terrorizing acts have been supported by Thaksin Shinnawatra. He did so, as a last ditch to fight against the laws and the justice systems which had pronounce him guilty and had punished him according as you would understand from reading this supreme court verdict. The second big mistake made by the foreign presses were the terming that the protests were a conflicts between the rural poors and the elites. The livelihood of the rural poors and the well educated and the affluent classes is just as different as in the US, UK or any other country. There has never been any conflicts between these two groups of people. However, it has been Thaksin Shinnawatra who, after running out of all other platforms to fight against the government, picked on these rural poors, by bribing, tricking, scheming. For example: Some of the rural poors are in Bangkok because they have been told by Thaksin’s people that the government would treat them to a trip to the zoological garden in Bangkok and will also pay them for the trip. That’s how so many children were brought to Bangkok No countries on earth would tolerate the terrorizing of a nation’s capital by the mercenaries and hired professional killers hidden behind the women and children that they managed to trick to their gathering. Thus, the action launched today by Thai government is, in fact, long over due. mahwatthai Report As Abusive     May 18, 2010 10:07pm EDT I would suggest that all international journalists study the last verdict on Thaksin Shinnawatra. That pronouncement has detailed many of the authority abusing and law violation of Thaksin Shinnawatra in enriching himself while serving as the prime minister of Thailand. When the details of this ousted prime minister’s crimes and acts is understood, then you would be in a much better position to understand the current disorder in Thailand. One of the biggest mistake made by almost all foreign presses had been their statements that “The protesters support former prime minister Thaksin Shinnawatra.” The fact is that these protesters and all of the terrorizing acts have been supported by Thaksin Shinnawatra. He did so, as a last ditch to fight against the laws and the justice systems which had pronounce him guilty and had punished him according as you would understand from reading this supreme court verdict. The second big mistake made by the foreign presses were the terming that the protests were a conflicts between the rural poors and the elites. The livelihood of the rural poors and the well educated and the affluent classes is just as different as in the US, UK or any other country. There has never been any conflicts between these two groups of people. However, it has been Thaksin Shinnawatra who, after running out of all other platforms to fight against the government, picked on these rural poors, by bribing, tricking, scheming. For example: Some of the rural poors are in Bangkok because they have been told by Thaksin’s people that the government would treat them to a trip to the zoological garden in Bangkok and will also pay them for the trip. That’s how so many children were brought to Bangkok No countries on earth would tolerate the terrorizing of a nation’s capital by the mercenaries and hired professional killers hidden behind the women and children that they managed to trick to their gathering. Thus, the action launched today by Thai government is, in fact, long over due. mahwatthai Report As Abusive     May 18, 2010 10:13pm EDT I would suggest that all international journalists study the last verdict on Thaksin Shinnawatra. That pronouncement has detailed many of the authority abusing and law violation of Thaksin Shinnawatra in enriching himself while serving as the prime minister of Thailand. When the details of this ousted prime minister’s crimes and acts is understood, then you would be in a much better position to understand the current disorder in Thailand. The big mistake made by the foreign presses were the terming that the protests were a conflicts between the rural poors and the elites. The livelihood of the rural poors and the well educated and the affluent classes is just as different as in the US, UK or any other country. There has never been any conflicts between these two groups of people. However, it has been the leaders of the red shirts who, after running out of all other platforms to fight against the government, picked on these rural poors, by bribing, tricking, scheming. For example: Some of the rural poors are in Bangkok because they have been told by red shirt people that the government would treat them to a trip to the zoological garden in Bangkok and will also pay them for the trip. That’s how so many children were brought to Bangkok There was never really any fights for civil right, human right, democracy, etc. here. The only thing we really see are a bunch of armed people sought to threaten the government and Thai people to submit to the favorable terms their wanted for Thaksin Shinnawatra. No countries on earth would tolerate the terrorizing of a nation’s capital by the mercenaries and hired professional killers hidden behind the women and children that they managed to trick to their gathering. Thus, the action launched today by Thai government is, in fact, long over due. mahwatthai Report As Abusive     May 18, 2010 10:18pm EDT Wake up world! The Thai military massacres its own citizens when they ask for a democratic election! The silent international press is fully complicit. Rfairb Report As Abusive     May 18, 2010 10:24pm EDT May I suggest that the foreign journalists read the latest supreme court verdict on Thaksin Shinnawatra. The verdict has spelled out all the wrong doings and the applicable laws. This would help you understand the action of the red mobs currently terrorizing Bangkok better. They are just trying to fight for a better terms for Thaksin Shinnawatra. There has never been any struggles for: 1) Democracy 2) Class Struggles 3) Mistreatments Thank you. mahwatthai Report As Abusive     May 18, 2010 10:39pm EDT Use military to kill people. Force other side to the conner. Welcome to civil war. Dot_Link Report As Abusive     May 18, 2010 10:53pm EDT ATT: RfairB How do the Red Shirts think they are going to bring about a better Government by holding a country to ransom? If their action works, what happens the next time a well financed group want to oust a newly elected Government. Yep you guesed it, it will happen again. It becomes a problem when coups become the popular way of changing government, democracy becomes harder to obtain. Somewhere along the line, an incumbant needs to be left to face normal respected democratic elections. Look at Fiji, where their has been around ten coups in as many years. You can’t trust the Government well who can!!! RED SHIRTS stop being idealists and destroying your country in the process. It’s sad because RED SHIRTS really believe they are fighting for the rights of the poor, but Thaksin has them duped and turned it into US vs THEM. That is not Thailand!! This is not the way to change Government. The military is exercising about as much restraint as any government would with armed protestors encamped in a city. inorbit Report As Abusive     May 18, 2010 11:07pm EDT People in outskirts of Thailand are generally supportive of their PM, Mr Vijajewa. Heard that during my recent trip to Northern Thai, though they may say it in low tone of voice. MrsRao Report As Abusive       See All Comments (17)       Add a Comment *We welcome comments that advance the story directly or with relevant tangential information. We try to block comments that use offensive language or appear to be spam and review comments frequently to ensure they meet our standards. If you see a comment that you believe is irrelevant or inappropriate, you can flag it to our editors by using the report abuse links. Views expressed in the comments do not represent those of Reuters.   © Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters Editorial Editions: Africa Arabic Argentina Brazil Canada China France Germany India Italy Japan Latin America Mexico Russia Spain United Kingdom United States Reuters Contact Us Advertise With Us Help Journalism Handbook Archive Site Index Video Index   Analyst Research Mobile Newsletters RSS Podcasts Widgets Your View Labs Thomson Reuters Copyright Disclaimer Privacy Professional Products Professional Products Support Financial Products About Thomson Reuters Careers Online Products Acquisitions Monthly Buyouts Venture Capital Journal International Financing Review Project Finance International PEhub.com PE Week Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests. NYSE and AMEX quotes delayed by at least 20 minutes. Nasdaq delayed by at least 15 minutes. For a complete list of exchanges and delays, please click here.

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