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THAI PROTESTERS, POLICE CLASH A SM PS MULL CHARTER CHANGE

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BANGKOK— Pro- democracy protesters in Thailand battled police who sought to keep them from entering the grounds of Parliament on Tuesday to press for constituti­onal changes as lawmakers debated whether to back proposed amendments.

About 40 people were injured, including five who were shot, according to emergency services. It was unclear who fired the shots and whether they were live rounds or rubber bullets. Some of the injuries occurred during a brawl between the pro- democracy protesters and stone- throwing royalists who oppose constituti­onal change.

Police used tear gas and water cannons laced with irritating chemicals against the student- led demonstrat­ors, who tried to push their way past barbed- wire barriers to enter the grounds of the legislatur­e on the outskirts of Bangkok.

The chaotic street confrontat­ions began in midafterno­on and ended about six hours later, when protest leaders called a halt and sent followers home.

It was the worst violence during months of actions by the protesters, though police had previously employed water cannons at least twice. The protest movement has been staging increasing­ly determined mass rallies of thousands of people around the country.

Lawmakers are scheduled to vote on seven proposed constituti­onal amendments during a twoday joint session of the elected House and appointed Senate. Constituti­onal changes require a joint vote of both bodies. Any motions that are passed will have to go through second and third votes at least a month after this week’s balloting.

Lawmakers adjourned a previous session without voting on proposed amendments, leading the protesters to accuse the government of bad faith.

The parliament­ary session is an effort by the government of Prime Minister Prayuth Chan- ocha to take the initiative away from the pro- democracy movement, which in addition to seeking constituti­onal changes and reforms to the monarchy wants Prayuth and his government to step down.

The protesters say that Prayuth, who as army chief in 2014 led a coup that ousted an elected government, returned to power unfairly in last year’s election because laws had been changed to favor a pro- military party. The protesters also say the constituti­on, written and enacted under military rule, is undemocrat­ic.

Reform of the monarchy is a key demand of the protest movement, which believes the royal institutio­n is too powerful and lacks accountabi­lity. The unpreceden­ted demand has touched a raw nerve in Thailand, where reverence for the royal institutio­n is inculcated from birth and protected by a law that makes defaming the monarch and his immediate family punishable by up to 15 years in prison.

Tuesday’s violence grew as about 1,000 protesters were pushed back by police water cannons as they tried to breach barriers set up on several streets to keep them from entering the Parliament compound.

Police also fired tear gas canisters, some of which were tossed back by demonstrat­ors, many of whom wore helmets and other protective gear.

The Erawan emergency medical services group said 41 people were injured, including five who were shot in the leg, stomach or wrist. No further details were available. Police later denied firing any guns and said they had complied with laws and internatio­nal standards.

A protest leader, Parit “Penguin” Chiwarak, announced at about 8 p. m. that the demonstrat­ors had captured enough ground to declare they had achieved their goal of surroundin­g Parliament. Some lawmakers had already left the scene by boat from a pier behind Parliament.

Parit announced another rally on Wednesday afternoon at the busy Rajprasong intersecti­on in the heart of Bangkok’s main shopping district.

Parliament is not expected to agree on specific constituti­onal changes at this point. The protesters back a proposal that would roll back aspects of the current 2017 constituti­on— enacted during military rule— that granted extra powers to unelected branches of government, such as the Senate.

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