The Oklahoman

Thai protesters carry on demonstrat­ions despite warnings

- By Jerry Harmer

BANGKOK—Prodemocra­cy activists in Thailand launched their fifth straight days of protests on Sunday, scheduling demonstrat­ions not just in the capital but also at several other locations around the country.

The demonstrat­ors received a new warning from police that they are violating the law. On Saturday, however, few people were arrested as peaceful rallies were held at several points around Bangkok, the capital, with several thousand people taking part.

The protest movement — which is calling for the prime minister's resignatio­n, a more democratic constituti­on and a reformed monarchy — began in March at universiti­es around the country. After a lull due to the coronaviru­s crisis, it was revived in late July, building up strength, particular­ly in Bangkok.

On Sunday, rallies were called in at least a dozen provinces, including Chiang Mai, a popular tourist destinatio­n in northern Thailand.

The authoritie­s in Bangkok tried in vain to keep people from gathering by selectivel­y shutting down stations on Bangkok's elevated and undergroun­d mass transit lines. On Saturday, after protest organizers urged followers to meet at the city' s Skytrain stations, they ordered all stations to be closed, to little avail.

The current cycle of confrontat­ions began before dawn Thursday, when police broke up an overnight rally outside Government House, which hosts the offices of Prime Minister Prayuth Chaon-ocha. It led Prayuth to declare a state of emergency, banning gatherings of more than five people and allowing the government extra powers to keep the peace.

Protesters ignored the emergency decree and gathered Thursday night in large numbers at a major intersecti­on in Bangkok's central shopping district. overcoming half-hearted resistance by thin lines of police.

A Friday night rally at a nearby intersecti­on was crushed by a large forced of riot police backed by a truck-mounted water cannon. The use of force was condemned by rights organizati­ons.

Police made no efforts to break up Saturday' s gatherings, which ended peacefully at 8 p.m ., as scheduled by organizers.

A statement issued late Saturday night by Prayuth's office said the government had acted within the law in seeking to stop the rallies, and did not intend to deny people their rights.

“The situation is very dynamic at the moment,” police deputy spokespers­on Kiss ana Phatanacha­roen said at a Sunday morning news conference. “There is no formula as to what we do or what we don't do.”

He said that if people failed to obey the law, police would be compelled to enforce it.

 ??  ?? Pro-democracy demonstrat­ors hold posters of protest leaders who have been arrested, during an antigovern­ment protest Sunday at Victory Monument in Bangkok, Thailand. [SAKCHAI LALIT/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS]
Pro-democracy demonstrat­ors hold posters of protest leaders who have been arrested, during an antigovern­ment protest Sunday at Victory Monument in Bangkok, Thailand. [SAKCHAI LALIT/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS]

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