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Troops patrol Thailand streets after deadly protests
by Sanjay Jha | October 7, 2008 at 10:13 pm
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Amidst the threat of protestors to intensify their stir in the capital Bangkok today , there is no improvement in the situation in Thailand a day after two people died and over 400 were injured in the worst street violence in 16 years. Violence erupted yesterday after Thai police tried to make passage to allow in lawmakers and that flared up skirmishes between two sides.
Troops patrolled Bangkok's streets Wednesday and police guarded the prime minister's residence a day after violent clashes rocked the Thai capital, leaving two people dead and hundreds injured.
Dressed in khaki anti-riot gear, unarmed personnel from the army, navy and air force were deployed outside key government buildings including parliament - focus of Tuesday's deadly chaos.
Protesters from the anti-government People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) were quick to blame security forces for the unrest, when police fired tear gas at a crowd of thousands marching on parliament and angry mobs retaliated with gunfire and fighting.
"Our fellow friends died because of Thai police. We will mourn those who have died and are injured," said PAD spokeswoman Anchalee Paireerak.
Despite the strong military presence, another PAD member, who refused to be named, said the group would fight on.
"We will clear away our tears and we will stand up and fight with one heart and two hands," she told AFP.
One female protester was killed during the clashes after suffering internal injuries, a doctor from a Bangkok hospital said.
A man was also killed in a car bombing near the protest site, while police said eight of their officers were shot or stabbed.
The unrest followed months of demonstrations aimed at removing Thailand's elected government over its ties to former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted in a September 2006 coup.
Thailand's media described the violence in cataclysmic terms Wednesday - the English-language daily The Nation said the "mini civil war" had created a "bloodbath in Bangkok" - and accused police of aggravating the situation.
"There can be no justification for the authorities to have used such force to disperse the peaceful crowd," the Bangkok Post wrote.
An army spokesman said police called in the military to help quell protests but insisted there would be no fresh military takeover in Thailand, which has suffered 18 coups since the end of the absolute monarchy in 1932.
Protesters have occupied Thailand's seat of government for six weeks, demanding the resignation of governments they say are proxies for former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra.
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