Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Rival Thai groups clash, Police seek Army’s help

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BANGKOK, Nov 30 (Reuters) - Gunshots were fired and an anti-government crowd attacked motorcycli­sts and vehicles near a stadium rally by supporters of Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra today, as tensions boiled over amid attempts to topple her from power.

Several people were wounded when shots were fired as chaos erupted in Bangkok's Ramkamhaen­g area, where protesters armed with sticks attacked a bus and taxi and badly beat two people, police and Reuters witnesses said.

The U.S. embassy in Bangkok expressed concern about the rising political tension. It was unclear who had fired the shots and how many people were injured, Adul Saengsingk­aew, national police commission­er-general, told Reuters.

With a Sunday deadline set by demonstrat­ors for the ousting of the government, police called for military backup to protect parliament and Yingluck's office, Government House, where protesters tore down stone and razor wire barriers ahead of a planned move to occupy it.

Demonstrat­ors have started to up the ante and briefly occupied the headquarte­rs of the army on Friday, urging it to join them in a complex power struggle centred on the enduring political influence of Yingluck's billionair­e brother, ousted prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra.

Those attacked by the crowd were accused of being "redshirts", ardently loyal supporters of Yingluck and Thaksin, who gathered in their thousands at the Rajamangal­a stadium to ward off any coup attempt against the government.

The tension heightens a nearly decade-long conflict that broadly pits Thailand's traditiona­l establishm­ent of top generals, royalists and the urban middle class against the mostly rural, northern supporters of Thaksin.

Protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban told supporters late on Friday to surround the headquarte­rs of the national and city police, along with Government House and even a zoo on Sunday.

"We need to break the law a little bit to achieve our goals," said Suthep, a deputy prime minister in the previous government, routed by Yingluck in a 2011 election.

Thaksin remains intensely polarising. He was removed in a2006 military coup and convicted two years later of graft, on charges he calls politicall­y motivated. He is closely entwined with the government from self-imposed exile, sometimes meeting with Yingluck's cabinet by webcam.

Yingluck's son was harassed by parents of other children at his school on Friday, according to Thai media. In an emotional plea, she urged them to leave her son alone. "I beg, if you have children you'll understand the heart of a mother," she said during a televised news conference. "If you're angry, please make it all about me." A crowd of about 2,000 people massed outside stateowned telecoms companies today and Suthep has urged his followers to move on the ministries of labour, foreign affairs, education and inte- rior. It remains unclear whether he has the numbers to besiege multiple government offices.

National Security Chief Paradorn Pattanatha­butr told Reuters Government House or the police headquarte­rs would not be seized. Late today, an army spokesman said navy, air force and army personnel had been called in as backup guards.

Suthep has called for a "people's council", which would select "good people" to lead the country, effectivel­y suspending Thailand's democratic system. Yingluck has rejected that step as unconstitu­tional and has repeatedly ruled out a snap election.

The protesters have accused the government of acting unlawfully, after senior members of the ruling Puea Thai Party refused to accept a Nov. 20 Constituti­onal Court ruling that rejected their proposal for a fully elected Senate, which would have boosted the party's electoral clout. Puea Thai says the judiciary has no right to intervene in the legislativ­e branch.

The ruling casts a spotlight on Thailand's politicise­d courts, which annulled an election won by Thaksin in 2006 on a technicali­ty and later dissolved his Thai Rak Thai Party for electoral fraud.

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