Manila Bulletin

Protesters gather ahead of pro-democracy rally in tense Bangkok

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BANGKOK, Thailand (AFP) — More than a thousand protesters gathered in Bangkok ahead of a pro-democracy rally on Wednesday, with tensions high in Thailand after the arrest of 21 proreform activists a day earlier.

The activists are part of a movement that has organized rallies since July, calling for an overhaul of the government and the resignatio­n of Premier Prayut Chan-O-Cha. Some have also demanded reforms to the unassailab­le monarchy.

Anon Numpa — a prominent activist and one of the key figures demanding royal reform — urged the people gathering at the capital's Democracy Monument to remain calm and respectful, with the motorcade carrying the King and Queen scheduled to pass by in the afternoon.

"There will be provocatio­ns from the other side so please trust in me — we don't want to clash with anyone," he said. "When the royal motorcade arrives, don't utter swear words."

The gathering comes a day after police clashed with protesters staging an impromptu rally at the same site, arresting 21 activists who were "uncooperat­ive" as officials tried to empty the area for King Maha Vajiralong­korn's motorcade.

Dozens of remaining protesters raised a three-finger salute as the royal motorcade drove by on Tuesday, a gesture the pro-democracy movement has borrowed from the popular "Hunger Games" films.

By 10 a.m. (0300 GMT) Wednesday, more than a thousand protesters had gathered there again, Bangkok police said. Some 14,000 police were deployed to control the situation.

Wednesday's demonstrat­ion is intended to commemorat­e the 47th anniversar­y of the October 14, 1973 student uprising against a hated military dictatorsh­ip during which 77 people were killed.

The current protesters are demanding the removal of Prayut — a former army chief who mastermind­ed the 2014 coup — a rewrite of a military-scripted constituti­on, and for the government to stop harassing political opponents.

But while their gatherings have been peaceful, some of the leaders' public calls for reforms to the monarchy are unpreceden­ted and have drawn backlash from the pro-royalist establishm­ent.

On Wednesday, hundreds of counter-protesters wearing yellow — the royal color — gathered near the Royal Thai Army headquarte­rs, about a kilometer away from the Democracy Monument.

 ??  ?? THAI ROYALS — Thailand's King Maha Vajiralong­korn (center, left), with Queen Suthida (center), Prince Dipangkorn Rasmijoti (2nd from left, in white shirt and cap), greets people outside the Grand Palace after a royal merit-making ceremony to mark the fourth anniversar­y of the death of the late Thai king Bhumibol Adulyadej in Bangkok. (STR/Dailynews/AFP)
THAI ROYALS — Thailand's King Maha Vajiralong­korn (center, left), with Queen Suthida (center), Prince Dipangkorn Rasmijoti (2nd from left, in white shirt and cap), greets people outside the Grand Palace after a royal merit-making ceremony to mark the fourth anniversar­y of the death of the late Thai king Bhumibol Adulyadej in Bangkok. (STR/Dailynews/AFP)

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