Daily Trust

Three killed in Bangkok clashes

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Gun battles erupted between Thai police and antigovern­ment protesters in Bangkok on Tuesday and three people were killed and dozens wounded as authoritie­s made their most determined effort yet to clear demonstrat­ors from the streets.

In a day of tangled developmen­ts in Thailand’s long-running political crisis, the country’s anti-corruption body announced it was filing charges against Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra relating to a rice subsidy scheme that has fuelled middle-class opposition to her government.

In a related developmen­t, the Government Savings Bank (GSB) said it was calling back a loan to the state farm bank that manages the rice subsidy scheme.

The clashes were the most intense in the latest installmen­t of an eight-year political battle broadly pitting the Bangkok middle class and royalist establishm­ent against the poorer, mostly rural supporters of Yingluck and her billionair­e brother, former premier Thaksin Shinawatra.

Reuters witnesses heard gunfire and saw police firing weapons in the area around Phanfa Bridge in the old quarter of the city.

Police said they had come under fire from a sniper on a rooftop in the area and that M-79 grenades were also fired.

“One policeman has died and 14 police were injured,” national police chief Adul Saengsingk­aew told Reuters. “He was shot in the head.”

The Erawan Medical Center, which monitors hospitals, said on its website that two protesters, both men aged 52 and 29, had also been killed.

The center said 59 people had been wounded. It did not provide a breakdown of how many of the wounded were police and how many were civilians.

Security officials said earlier that 15,000 officers were involved in the operation “Peace for Bangkok Mission”, to reclaim protest sites around central Bangkok’s Government House and other government offices in the north of the capital.

Yingluck has been forced to abandon her offices in Government House by the protesters, who have also blocked major intersecti­ons since mid-January.

Police said about 100 protesters had been arrested in an early morning operation to clear demonstrat­ors from another protest site near the Energy Ministry.

Trouble started with clouds of teargas near Government House and soon police were crouching behind riot shields as officers clashed with protesters. It was not clear who had fired the teargas and the authoritie­s blamed protesters.

By mid-afternoon, police had largely withdrawn from protest sites and the streets were quiet.

The protesters are trying to oust Yingluck, whom they view as a proxy of Thaksin, a former telecoms tycoon toppled in a military coup in 2006.

Among their grievances is the rice subsidy scheme, a populist move to pay farmers an above-market price that has proved hugely expensive and run into funding problems, and the National Anti-Corruption Commission announced an investigat­ion last month. On Tuesday, the commission said it was summoning Yingluck to hear charges against her on February 27.

Yingluck called a snap election in December and has since led a caretaker administra­tion with only limited powers.

The election took place on February 2 but the main opposition party boycotted it and protesters disrupted it in parts of Bangkok and the south, the powerbase of the opposition. It may be many months before there is a quorum in parliament to elect a new prime minister.

 ?? PHOTO Reuters/Athit Perawongme­tha ?? Thai riot police officers assist a colleague after an explosion during clashes with anti-government protesters near Government House in Bangkok yesterday.
PHOTO Reuters/Athit Perawongme­tha Thai riot police officers assist a colleague after an explosion during clashes with anti-government protesters near Government House in Bangkok yesterday.

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