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Post Info TOPIC: News up date The Thai military shot 15 red shirt protesters dead and 650 injuries .
Kon Esan

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News up date The Thai military shot 15 red shirt protesters dead and 650 injuries .
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Thai army pulls back from protest clashes; 15 dead

Saturday, April 10, 2010

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Anti-government demonstrators offer prayers during early morning rally Saturday, April 10, 2010, in Bangkok, Thailand. Although rumors circulated that the army would be called in to clear thousands of protesters encamped in the Thai capital Saturday, Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva gave no indication that he would veer from his strict adherence to nonviolent measures.

A crackdown on anti-government protesters in Thailand's capital Saturday left at least 15 people dead and more than 650 injured, with no progress toward ending a month long standoff with demonstrators demanding new elections.

It was the worst violence in Bangkok since more than four dozen people were killed in an anti military protest in 1992. Bullet casings, rocks and pools of blood littered the streets where pitched battles raged for hours.

Army troops later retreated and asked protesters to do the same, resulting in an unofficial truce.

Four soldiers and 11 civilians, including a Japanese cameraman, were killed, according to the government's Erawan emergency center.

The savage fighting erupted after security forces tried to push out demonstrators who have been staging a month of disruptive protests demanding that Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva dissolve Parliament and call new elections.

The demonstrations are part of a long-running battle between the mostly poor and rural supporters of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, and the ruling elite they say orchestrated the 2006 military coup that removed him from power on corruption allegations.

The protesters, called "Red Shirts" for their garb, see the Oxford-educated Abhisit as a symbol of an elite impervious to the plight of Thailand's poor and claim he took office illegitimately in December 2008 after the military pressured Parliament to vote for him.

Saturday's violence and failure to dislodge the protesters are likely to make it harder to end the political deadlock. Previously, both sides had exercised considerable restraint.

Abhisit "failed miserably," said Michael Nelson, a German scholar of Southeast Asian studies working in Bangkok.

Tanet Charoenmuang, a political scientist at Chiang Mai University sympathetic to the Red Shirt's cause, said he expects the fighting will resume because the protesters are unafraid and the government refused to listen to them.

Abhisit went on national television shortly before midnight to pay condolences to the families of victims and indirectly assert that he would not bow to the protesters' demands.

"The government and I are still responsible for easing the situation and trying to bring peace and order to the country," Abhisit said.

Nelson said he had been hopeful the situation would calm down after the troops pulled back but that Abhisit's TV appearance raised doubts because he seemed "totally defiant."

The army had vowed to clear the protesters out of one of their two bases in Bangkok by nightfall, but the push instead set off street fighting. There was a continuous sound of gunfire and explosions, mostly from Molotov ****tails. After more than two hours of fierce clashes, the soldiers pulled back.

Army spokesman Col. Sansern Kaewkamnerd went on television to ask the protesters to retreat as well. He also accused them of firing live rounds and throwing grenades. An APTN cameraman saw two Red Shirt security guards carrying assault rifles.

At least 678 people were injured, according to the Erawan emergency center. The deaths included Japanese cameraman Hire Muramoto, who worked for Thomson Reuters news agency. In a statement, Reuters said he was shot in the chest.

Most of the fighting took place around Democracy Monument, but spread to the Khao San Road area, a favorite of foreign backpackers.

Soldiers made repeated charges to clear the Red Shirts, while some tourists stood by watching. Two protesters and a Buddhist monk with them were badly beaten by soldiers and taken away by ambulance.

A Japanese tourist who was wearing a red shirt was also clubbed by soldiers until bystanders rescued him.

Thai media reported that several soldiers were captured by the protesters. Red Shirts also staged protests in several other provinces, seizing the provincial hall in the northern city of Chiang Mai, Thaksin's hometown.

On Friday, the police and army failed to prevent demonstrators from breaking into the compound of a satellite transmission station and briefly restarting a pro-Red Shirt television station that had been shut down by the government under a state of emergency. The humiliating rout raised questions about how much control Abhisit has over the police and army.

Thailand's military has traditionally played a major role in politics, staging almost a score of coups since the country became a constitutional monarchy in 1932.

The Red Shirts have a second rally site in the heart of Bangkok's upscale shopping district, and more troops were sent there Saturday as well. The city's elevated mass transit system known as the Skytrain, which runs past that site, stopped running and closed all its stations.

Merchants say the demonstrations have cost them hundreds of millions of baht (tens of millions of dollars), and luxury hotels near the site have been under virtual siege.

Arrest warrants have been issued for 27 Red Shirt leaders, but none is known to have been taken into custody.



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Anonymous

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Battles in streets of Bangkok

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Anonymous

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Anonymous

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Hacker & Hacker

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 The Thai military didn't use live animation when the yellow shirt protesters took over the Thai parliament and  shutting down the airport and never arrest any of the yellow shirt protesters but gave them protection. They changed the laws and constitution just to convict Thaksin of abusing his power to do the business and became rich . The red shirt protesters are not back down even 15 were dead and 650 were injury and there will be more and more people join the red shirt and are willing to scarify for the good cause .

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Anonymous

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The red shirt  protesters knew that the military would shot and kill them but why they are still protesting and still be there now it is 3 weeks already in Bangkok. Why they are willing to sacrifice their lives for what they believe that is so stupid when they are dead that is no more fight so go home and fight the other day and using the brain instead to give up their lives.

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Anonymous

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The Thai government use the technique of killing the chicken in front the monkey . The yellow shirt and the current government get their power from the coup . They don't like the election because they know they will lose and never be elected by the election.

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Anonymous

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Anonymous

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Come on Laotians !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

The Thai soldiers only used Rubber Bullets and Tear Gas, but the red shirts used the guns and petrol bomb. 

Now, the red shirt is a terrorism definitely.

Please report the truth..............

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6390VO20100410

Twelve die as troops, protesters clash in Bangkok

Reuters) - Thai troops fired rubber bullets and tear gas at thousands of demonstrators, who fought back with guns, grenades and petrol bombs in riots that killed 12 people, Bangkok's worst political violence in 18 years

At least 521 people, including 64 soldiers and police, were wounded in the fighting near the Phan Fah bridge and Rajdumnoen Road in Bangkok's old quarter, a protest base near government buildings and the regional U.N. headquarters.

Twelve people died, including three soldiers, an emergency medical center said.

Among those killed was Reuters TV cameraman Hiro Muramoto, a 43-year-old Japanese national who had worked for Thomson Reuters in Tokyo for more than 15 years and had arrived in Bangkok on Thursday to cover the protests.

"I am dreadfully saddened to have lost our colleague Hiro Muramoto in the Bangkok clashes," said David Schlesinger, Reuters Editor-in-Chief.

"Journalism can be a terribly dangerous profession as those who try to tell the world the story thrust themselves in the center of the action. The entire Reuters family will mourn this tragedy."

Hundreds of "red shirt" protesters also forced their way into government offices in two northern cities, raising the risk of a larger uprising against Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva and his 16-month-old, military-backed government.

Washington urged both sides in the conflict to show restraint.

"We deplore this outbreak of political violence in Thailand, our long-term friend and ally, and urge good faith negotiations by the parties to resolve outstanding issues through peaceful means," White House spokesman Mike Hammer said.

Tension and uncertainty gripped the city of 15 million overnight, with protesters still on the streets and no sign of the government meeting demands for Abhisit to leave the country and an immediate dissolution of parliament.

In a televised statement, Abhisit expressed regret to the families of the victims and said the army was only allowed to use live bullets "firing into the air and in self-defense".

After hours of violence, army spokesman Sansern Kaewkamnerd said troops would pull back in the old quarter as the riot spread into Khao San Road, an area popular with back-packing tourists.

Khao San Road resembled a war zone, a Reuters photographer said. Shop windows were shattered. Cars were smashed. Many people lay wounded on the street. Police told reporters some protesters had ignited cooking gas cylinders and rolled them into troops.

"If this continues, if the army responds to the red shirts, violence will expand," Sansern said after announcing troops were withdrawing from the area.

He said soldiers had been pelted with petrol bombs and M79 grenades, and that some of the protesters were armed with guns.

A red shirt leader later called on supporters to pull back to the main protest sites.

BARRICADED SHOPPING DISTRICT

Troops mounted two major offensives on protesters in the Phan Fah bridge and Rajdumnoen Road area. Both times they fired rubber bullets and tear gas but failed to clear the area.

An afternoon offensive ended in a standoff with many wounded. After dark, troops opened fire again with rubber bullets about 500 meters (1,600 feet) away at an intersection leading to Khao San Road. Some fired live rounds. Helicopters dropped tear gas.

Tens of thousands also remained in Bangkok's main shopping district, a stretch of upscale department stores and five-star hotels held for a week by the mostly rural and working-class red shirts who say they have been marginalized in a country with one of Asia's widest disparities between rich and poor.

The red shirts used taxis and pick-up trucks to barricade themselves in that area, and expanded their control to include several more blocks. Hundreds of riot police who massed at one end retreated after being surrounding by red shirts.

The violence comes exactly a year after about 10,000 of the supporters of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra brought traffic in Bangkok to a standstill for several days, occupying major intersections.

In those protests, red shirts hijacked petrol tankers, torched dozens of public buses and hurled petrol bombs at troops until the army imposed order. Two people were killed and 123 wounded. The latest protests, however, involved more than five times as many protesters spread across several areas of the city.

The protesters say Abhisit lacks a popular mandate after coming to power in a 2008 parliamentary vote following a court ruling that dissolved a pro-Thaksin ruling party. They want immediate elections, which Thaksin's allies would be well placed to win.

The red shirts have won new support from Bangkok's urban poor but have angered middle classes, many of whom regard them as misguided slaves to Thaksin, a wily one-time telecoms tycoon who fled into exile to avoid a jail term for graft.

The government declared a state of emergency in Bangkok last Wednesday to control the protests after red shirts broke into the grounds of parliament, forcing some officials -- including the deputy prime minister -- to flee by helicopter.

(Additional reporting by Damir Sagolj and Vithoon Amorn; Editing by Nick Macfie)



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Kon Esan wrote:

Thai army pulls back from protest clashes; 15 dead

Saturday, April 10, 2010



After saw the news regarding Thai protesters against Thai government yesterday and last night then I don't understand why goverment sent troop forces and stoped protesters even at night time, also the protesters they just stood in their place they did not go along the street and destroy any thing as riot but they called themselve as democracy state and called Laos is communist state + dictatorship. So biggrin 

 



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laolamleuak wrote:

Kon Esan wrote:

 

Thai army pulls back from protest clashes; 15 dead

Saturday, April 10, 2010



After saw the news regarding Thai protesters against Thai government yesterday and last night then I don't understand why goverment sent troop forces and stoped protesters even at night time, also the protesters they just stood in their place they did not go along the street and destroy any thing as riot but they called themselve as democracy state and called Laos is communist state + dictatorship. So biggrin 

 



now  the death reaches 18 and including 4 armies , sorry to hear that, red shirts..

 



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List of the victims of the Black Saturday

The followings are 15 of 18 victims killed when red shirts protesters battled with soldiers.

1 Mr Ampon Katiyarat, 43

2 Mr Yuttana Thongcharoenponporn, 23

3 Mr Paison Tipkom, 37

4 Mr Sawat Wangam, 43

5 Mr Hirouki Muramoto

6 Mr Tawattanachai Kladsuk, 36

7 Mr Thotsachai Mekngamfa, 44

8 Mr Charoon Charnmaen, 46

9 Mr Wasant Puthong, 39

10 Mr Tawil Pomsantia, 43

11 Mr Kanueng Chatteh

12 Private Patapon Puriwatprapan

13 Private Anupong Muangrampan

14 Private Singha (last name unknown)

15 Sgt Chamnien (last name unknown)






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Anonymous

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khonthakek wrote:


List of the victims of the Black Saturday

The followings are 15 of 18 victims killed when red shirts protesters battled with soldiers.

1 Mr Ampon Katiyarat, 43

2 Mr Yuttana Thongcharoenponporn, 23

3 Mr Paison Tipkom, 37

4 Mr Sawat Wangam, 43

5 Mr Hirouki Muramoto

6 Mr Tawattanachai Kladsuk, 36

7 Mr Thotsachai Mekngamfa, 44

8 Mr Charoon Charnmaen, 46

9 Mr Wasant Puthong, 39

10 Mr Tawil Pomsantia, 43

11 Mr Kanueng Chatteh

12 Private Patapon Puriwatprapan

13 Private Anupong Muangrampan

14 Private Singha (last name unknown)

15 Sgt Chamnien (last name unknown)



Having looked on this list, it seems all are the relative of Chao Anou who was tortured 100 years ago, isn't it? Sou Sou!!!

 



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khonthakek wrote:

now  the death reaches 18 and including 4 armies , sorry to hear that, red shirts..

 



I just found the profile of the Japanese journalist who was dead and his camera now is keeping with red shairt leaders so may this will help to tell us about the truly during that time. 

558&size=512&logo=logo

 CAPTION:   Reuters Journalist Hiro Muramoto Killed in Bangkok Protest. (PRNewsFoto/Thomson Reuters) 
LOCATION:  TOKYO, , UNITED STATES
POST DATE:  Apr/10/2010 3:43 PM
TAG ID:  prnphotos091558
FORMAT:  3.9" x 6.0" @ 300 DPI (1199 x 1800 Color JPEG)
SPECIAL:  SEE STORY 20100410/NY84374, NY Media contact: Reuters – New York: Courtney Dolan, Head of Public Relations, Editorial, +1-646-223-8406, courtney.dolan@thomsonreuters
Document:  THOMSON REUTERS MURAMOTO
Source:  THOMSON REUTERS
Caption JR
Writer:  



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What a sad development.






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Anonymous

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This clip show that the protesters  or someone else throw the bomb and weapon first.
It's so sad.








R.I.P

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Anonymous

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This clip show what had happen hours before the bomb.

http://downstream.freetzi.com/red-shirt-protesters.php




P9115562-6.jpg


P9115562-15.jpg

“ความผิดของ ผบ.ทบ. คือใช้คนซุ่มยิงที่บนหลังคาตึกโรงเรียนสตรีวิทยา ซึ่งสาเหตุที่คนตายจำนวนมาก เพราะพลซุ่มยิงของทหารได้ยิงลงมาใส่ประชาชนก่อน ทำให้กองกำลังไม่ทราบฝ่ายหรือนักรบโรนินยิงตอบโต้ บังเอิญลูกระเบิดเอ็ม 79 ลูกแรกที่ยิงเข้าไปตกบริเวณเต้นท์ทหารข้างโรงเรียนสตรีวิทยา ที่ใช้เป็นกองบัญชาการรบครั้งนี้ ทำให้โดน พล.ต.วลิต โรจนภักดี ผู้บัญชาการกองพลทหารราบที่ 2 รักษาพระองค์ (ผบ.พล.ร. 2 .รอ.) ซึ่งเป็นแม่ทัพในการทำศึกครั้งนี้บาดเจ็บสาหัส และโดนนายทหารชั้นสัญญาบัตรหลายคนก็บาดเจ็บ ทำให้การศึกครั้งนี้ไม่มีคนสั่ง ไม่มีแม่ทัพ ไม่มีคนบัญชา ทำให้ทหารปราชัยถอยออกไป”พล.ต.ขัตติยะ กล่าว

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http://www.pantip.com/cafe/rajdumnern/topic/P9115562/P9115562-15.jpg

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http://www.france24.com/en/20100411-exclusive-france-24-footage-payen-show-soldiers-firing-crowd-riot-clashes-violence-demonstration-bangkok-thailand-crack

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P9118707-18.jpg

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Anonymous

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I heard that The 21 deads included a Full Colonel named Romklao.

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updated
ผบ.ทบ.ยันทหารทำดีแล้ว ยุบสภายุติปัญหา (ไอเอ็นเอ็น)

วันนี้ (12 เมษายน) พล.อ.อนุพงษ์ เผ่าจินดา ผู้บัญชาการทหารบก แถลงยืนยันว่า ทหารไม่ได้หน่อมแน้ม หรือ เกียร์ว่าง แต่แนวปฏิบัติต้องมีกรอบที่แน่ชัด โดยมีความคิดพื้นฐานคือ 2 ฝ่าย ไม่ใช่ศัตรูที่ต้องสังหารกัน โดยทหารมีสิทธิ์ปกป้องตนเองได้ แต่ไม่ได้ทำ ทุกนายทำดีที่สุดแล้ว

"สำหรับกองทัพโดยไม่ได้ล้มเหลว แต่ได้ทำในสิ่งที่สุดยอด และประเสริฐแล้ว และทหารทุกคนไม่สามารถยิงประชาชนได้ โดยทหารมีอาวุธหนักจริง แต่ไม่ได้นำมาใช้ และไม่มีการแจกกระสุน ซึ่ง ตนคิดว่าปัญหาจะต้องจบด้วยการยุบสภา แต่ขึ้นอยู่กับเงื่อนเวลาที่ฝ่ายการเมืองต้องไปตกลงกันเอง" ผู้บัญชาการทหารบก กล่าว

ขณะที่ผู้บัญชาการทหารบก ยังยืนยันด้วยว่า ส่วนตัวไม่เคยคิดประคองตัวทำตามคำสั่งรัฐบาล เพราะใกล้เกษียณอายุราชการ หรือเพื่อรักษาตำแหน่ง โดยไม่เคยมีความคิดนี้อยู่ในหัวใจ

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Anonymous

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Kon Esan wrote:

Thai army pulls back from protest clashes; 15 dead

Saturday, April 10, 2010

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Anti-government demonstrators offer prayers during early morning rally Saturday, April 10, 2010, in Bangkok, Thailand. Although rumors circulated that the army would be called in to clear thousands of protesters encamped in the Thai capital Saturday, Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva gave no indication that he would veer from his strict adherence to nonviolent measures.

A crackdown on anti-government protesters in Thailand's capital Saturday left at least 15 people dead and more than 650 injured, with no progress toward ending a month long standoff with demonstrators demanding new elections.

It was the worst violence in Bangkok since more than four dozen people were killed in an anti military protest in 1992. Bullet casings, rocks and pools of blood littered the streets where pitched battles raged for hours.

Army troops later retreated and asked protesters to do the same, resulting in an unofficial truce.

Four soldiers and 11 civilians, including a Japanese cameraman, were killed, according to the government's Erawan emergency center.

The savage fighting erupted after security forces tried to push out demonstrators who have been staging a month of disruptive protests demanding that Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva dissolve Parliament and call new elections.

The demonstrations are part of a long-running battle between the mostly poor and rural supporters of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, and the ruling elite they say orchestrated the 2006 military coup that removed him from power on corruption allegations.

The protesters, called "Red Shirts" for their garb, see the Oxford-educated Abhisit as a symbol of an elite impervious to the plight of Thailand's poor and claim he took office illegitimately in December 2008 after the military pressured Parliament to vote for him.

Saturday's violence and failure to dislodge the protesters are likely to make it harder to end the political deadlock. Previously, both sides had exercised considerable restraint.

Abhisit "failed miserably," said Michael Nelson, a German scholar of Southeast Asian studies working in Bangkok.

Tanet Charoenmuang, a political scientist at Chiang Mai University sympathetic to the Red Shirt's cause, said he expects the fighting will resume because the protesters are unafraid and the government refused to listen to them.

Abhisit went on national television shortly before midnight to pay condolences to the families of victims and indirectly assert that he would not bow to the protesters' demands.

"The government and I are still responsible for easing the situation and trying to bring peace and order to the country," Abhisit said.

Nelson said he had been hopeful the situation would calm down after the troops pulled back but that Abhisit's TV appearance raised doubts because he seemed "totally defiant."

The army had vowed to clear the protesters out of one of their two bases in Bangkok by nightfall, but the push instead set off street fighting. There was a continuous sound of gunfire and explosions, mostly from Molotov ****tails. After more than two hours of fierce clashes, the soldiers pulled back.

Army spokesman Col. Sansern Kaewkamnerd went on television to ask the protesters to retreat as well. He also accused them of firing live rounds and throwing grenades. An APTN cameraman saw two Red Shirt security guards carrying assault rifles.

At least 678 people were injured, according to the Erawan emergency center. The deaths included Japanese cameraman Hire Muramoto, who worked for Thomson Reuters news agency. In a statement, Reuters said he was shot in the chest.

Most of the fighting took place around Democracy Monument, but spread to the Khao San Road area, a favorite of foreign backpackers.

Soldiers made repeated charges to clear the Red Shirts, while some tourists stood by watching. Two protesters and a Buddhist monk with them were badly beaten by soldiers and taken away by ambulance.

A Japanese tourist who was wearing a red shirt was also clubbed by soldiers until bystanders rescued him.

Thai media reported that several soldiers were captured by the protesters. Red Shirts also staged protests in several other provinces, seizing the provincial hall in the northern city of Chiang Mai, Thaksin's hometown.

On Friday, the police and army failed to prevent demonstrators from breaking into the compound of a satellite transmission station and briefly restarting a pro-Red Shirt television station that had been shut down by the government under a state of emergency. The humiliating rout raised questions about how much control Abhisit has over the police and army.

Thailand's military has traditionally played a major role in politics, staging almost a score of coups since the country became a constitutional monarchy in 1932.

The Red Shirts have a second rally site in the heart of Bangkok's upscale shopping district, and more troops were sent there Saturday as well. The city's elevated mass transit system known as the Skytrain, which runs past that site, stopped running and closed all its stations.

Merchants say the demonstrations have cost them hundreds of millions of baht (tens of millions of dollars), and luxury hotels near the site have been under virtual siege.

Arrest warrants have been issued for 27 Red Shirt leaders, but none is known to have been taken into custody.




I have said it many times before This is just the beginning...the worsth is not yet here and the end is not yet near.

 



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Anonymous

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Nuttawut talked about a Lao wife of one of the protesters who got killed.

http://www.mediafire.com/?ioddmnhdmmy

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Thai poll body says ruling party must be dissolved

Thai protestors keep vote demands 

BANGKOK – Thailand's coalition government teetered Monday after the Election Commission ordered the ruling party be dissolved for allegedly concealing campaign donations and the influential army commander said he supports a new vote.

The Election Commission ruling and the army chief's opinion buoyed anti-government protesters who have demonstrated for the past month pressing for Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva's resignation. The standoff turned deadly on Saturday when troops tried to drive away a large group of protesters, resulting in clashes that left 21 people dead in Thailand's worst political violence in nearly two decades.

Partner parties in Abhisit's government also suggested he consider calling elections earlier than the end of year, the timeframe he offered so-called "Red Shirt" protesters, who have insisted on a vote within 15 days.

Thanis Sriprathes, deputy secretary-general of the Election Commission, told reporters Abhisit's Democrat Party was found guilty of failing to disclose — as required by law — that it received 258 million baht ($8 million) from TPI Polene, a cement producer listed on the Thai stock market.

A final decision on whether the Democrat Party should be dissolved, however, rests with the Constitutional Court. No date has been set to hear the case.

"This is a massive blow to the Democrat Party's legitimacy and suggests their wider alliance may just perhaps be starting to fragment," said Lee Jones, a lecturer in international relations at the University of London.

Abhisit suffered another blow when army chief Gen. Anupong Paochinda told reporters dissolving Parliament and calling new elections might resolve the country's political crisis.

The army chief was until now seen as a staunch backer of the prime minister. The apparent about-face puts Abhisit under renewed pressure given the army is an influential force in the country's politics — and has not hesitated to stage coups during previous bouts of political instability.

"If the issue cannot be resolved through political means, then Parliament dissolution seems to be a reasonable step ... I just want peace to prevail," Anupong told reporters.

At loggerheads in the yearslong struggle for power are the rural supporters of ousted Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra and the traditional ruling elite represented by Abhisit and his allies.

Abhisit's supporters include business leaders, the military brass, the judiciary and bureaucrats — supported by the urban middle class.

The root of the trouble goes back to 2006 when a coup drove Thaksin from power amid accusations of corruption. Thailand has seen three governments since then, but every administration has been dogged by street protests by rival groups.

In 2008, anti-Thaksin protesters besieged the government headquarters for months and occupied the airports for a week. The crisis was defused by a court ruling similar to Monday's that unseated the pro-Thaksin government. Subsequently, Abhisit became prime minister.

Meanwhile, Foreign Minister Kasit Piromya lashed out at Thaksin while on a visit to the U.S., accusing him of personally instigating the recent deadly clashes.

"He's a bloody terrorist," Kasit told a small group of academics and reporters, speaking Monday on the sidelines of a global nuclear summit in Washington. Abhisit canceled his trip to Washington because of the chaos.

Kasit compared Thaksin to dictators like Hitler, Mussolini and Stalin and to the terror group al-Qaida. He urged the United States to pressure Thaksin's supporters to turn away from violence and enter into negotiations with the government.

Thailand has seen three governments in the four years since the 2006 coup, and Kasit acknowledged that his country has "not found the right formula. We have not found the compromise."

"Thailand cannot go on behaving like a banana republic ... and become a problem child," Kasit said at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies.

The repeated unrest has threatened to ruin the country's reputation as a stable haven for commerce, investment and tourism. The stock market closed 3.6 percent down Monday.

While the Election Commission ruling could set the stage for another change in power, it may not provide a permanent solution. There is also a chance that Abhisit's impending departure could fuel another round of counter-demonstrations by his supporters.

"While a dissolution of the Democrat Party may ease the current crisis, it can only be a temporary fix," said Tyrell Haberkorn, a researcher at The Australian National University in Canberra.

"The issues on which the current crisis turns — who can participate in politics and governance, who determines the meaning of justice, and what kind of speech is permitted — cannot be resolved in one fell swoop," she said in an e-mail interview.

Raucous cheers erupted at the main protest site when Veera Musikapong, a protest leader, announced the Election Commission's decision. "This is a victory for us. Our democracy heroes didn't die in vain," Veera said.

If the Democrat Party is dissolved, new elections will be called and the prime minister and top executives of the party will be barred from politics for five years.

The commission was scheduled to unveil its ruling on April 20, but announced it more than a week early without explanation. It came on the eve of a four-day holiday for Songkran, the traditional new year when many urban Thais visit relatives in the countryside. Many people feared the festival — where people douse friends and strangers alike with water — would be marred by the political unrest and demonstrations.

Earlier Monday, the Red Shirts paraded coffins carrying slain protesters through the capital saying they would not back down.

"Our position is clear. We want the Parliament dissolved now



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Kon Esan

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Thai government ban the foreigner journalists to report the truth and  you tube as well about the shooting which were caught on the foreign journalist camera. Australian news reporter  caught it on tape ,on April 11 put on you tube then the Thai government deleted.

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Kon Esan

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Kon Esan wrote:



        For sure that deadly incident that occured on April 11 in Bangkok  between the red shirt protesters and the Thai military that will prevent million of tourists to come to Thailand which also affect tourists to come to visit Laos and also directly and indirectly to Lao economy. 

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Kon Esan

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Dark Angel wrote:
Konesan wrote:



        For sure that deadly incident that occurred on April 11 in Bangkok  between the red shirt protesters and the Thai military that will prevent million of tourists to come to Thailand which also affect tourists to come to visit Laos and also directly and indirectly to Lao economy. 
         Of course , that deadly incident will cost Thailand and Laos economy specially from tourists. The same way that the yellow shirt shut down the airport and now this deadly clashes . Well as the world know that the yellow shirt Thai government came to power by the military dictator . The yellow shirt Thai government wrongly accused Thaksin of abused his power and bend the rule to do business and became wealthy but the fact is Thaksin was already billionaire long before he became Thai prime minister. My opinion to say that Thaksin is stupid why he want to become the politician and Thai prime minister when he could have an easy life and why would he care about the poor people that would cause him not to be able to live in his own country.

 



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Anonymous

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Dark Angel wrote:

Kon Esan wrote:



        For sure that deadly incident that occured on April 11 in Bangkok  between the red shirt protesters and the Thai military that will prevent million of tourists to come to Thailand which also affect tourists to come to visit Laos and also directly and indirectly to Lao economy. 

This maybe what Lao need to speed up direct flight to Lao......

 



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The Election Commission plans to seek a Constitution Court order on the disbandment of the ruling Democrat Party for accepting a secret, 258 million baht donation from TPI Polene and the mishandling of a 29 million baht fund from the commission in 2005.

http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/politics/36012/democrats-under-fire-after-ruling

history of democrat party in the past 64 years

http://headline.kapook.com/ปฐมบทการปิดตำนาน%2064%20ปี%20พรรคประชาธิปัตย์-2736.html

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Anonymous

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ที่มา : เว็บไซต์พรรคประชาธิปัตย์ (www.democrat.or.th)

http://www.democrat.or.th/th/about/history/



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Oh ! why are they so stupid ? using the plastic bullets is not that very different from the real one, imagine if the bullet strikes your penis or testicules, your liver, your throat or your eyes you will die instantly within a distance of 5 - 10 metre without a drop of blood...I hear from a red shirted leader last night that he saw a woman who was shot by a plastic bullet just striked one of her eyes and the eye was gone out of its orbit ..Oh ! my God ! Yeah ! only by plastic bullets...
so go on killing poor people, thai government, it is your right, it is the right of the thai royal army...plastic bullet cause no harm... please go on shooting on those unarmed people and you will be awarded with medal of hero of the thai army and no one will stop you !
it is disgusting for me 'cos perhaps one of my relartives is in the list of the deads...
May god save their soul.

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Anonymous

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sue! sue! red sue! don't give up  no stop! you'll be the winner we love you we are support you just tell us how we can help!! brother!.

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fighting for the freedom to choose and be represented. confuse.gif

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Anonymous

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Thanks for sharing..

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Anonymous

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The Thai military sniper shot the red shirt protester in cool blood. Look at the guy with the flag. May his soul  rest in peace.




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Anonymous

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How the prime minister Abhisit denied that the soldier aim and fire in the cloud.




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Kon Esan

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 The Abhisit has the blood in his hand, Accused Thaksin of corruption but Abhisit as murdereer.

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Anonymous

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Kon Esan wrote:

 The Abhisit has the blood in his hand, Accused Thaksin of corruption but Abhisit as murdereer.




 



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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qXXKGQVlDzQ

Nine anti-government 'Red Shirt' protesters who died in Saturday's clashes in Bangkok were killed by gunshots an independent autopsy panel showed. The violence left 21 people dead weekend. There were the bloodiest clashes Thailand has seen in 18 years with demonstrators demanding new elections. Images provided by Red Shirt protesters.Duration:

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Anonymous

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http://www.voicetv.co.th/content/11270/มติยุบปชปยุทธการสับขาหลอก

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Anonymous

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I never seen how thai priminister stupidnity like thes! He stupid like and animal!killing his own people, because they are Isaan people that's why they can do every thing to them!! (Buk sut)!!

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Anonymous

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Anonymous wrote:

I never seen how thai priminister stupidnity like thes! He stupid like and animal!killing his own people, because they are Isaan people that's why they can do every thing to them!! (Buk sut)!!



Yes man, you are right,,, never seen in the world, this is first Pm in the history of the world that, nearly a million protesters are asking him to resign, but Arphisit is still taking his power as prime minister...and odered the army and uses his power to crackdown the people....... Na dan , Na dan,,, his politic career will end when there is new election...

 



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Anonymous

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Kon Esan wrote:



KON E-SAN  SU SU SU  FOR   PA SA TI PA TAI

FOR DEMOCRACY

WE'RE WATCH NEWS FROM  WWW.AMERILAO.ORGWWW.ALITTLEBUDDHA.COM , WWW.SUTHICHAIYOON.COM ,WWW.CHIANGRAI24.TV  , WWW.PEOPLECHANNEL.COM ,WWW.THAI-REDSHIRT-YOUTUBE.COM 

 RIGHT NOW ,  20 DEAD, 800 INJURY, UPDATE NEWS

KON E-SAN, GOODLUCK TO KON E-SAN
















Thai army pulls back from protest clashes; 15 dead

Saturday, April 10, 2010

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Anti-government demonstrators offer prayers during early morning rally Saturday, April 10, 2010, in Bangkok, Thailand. Although rumors circulated that the army would be called in to clear thousands of protesters encamped in the Thai capital Saturday, Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva gave no indication that he would veer from his strict adherence to nonviolent measures.

A crackdown on anti-government protesters in Thailand's capital Saturday left at least 15 people dead and more than 650 injured, with no progress toward ending a month long standoff with demonstrators demanding new elections.

It was the worst violence in Bangkok since more than four dozen people were killed in an anti military protest in 1992. Bullet casings, rocks and pools of blood littered the streets where pitched battles raged for hours.

Army troops later retreated and asked protesters to do the same, resulting in an unofficial truce.

Four soldiers and 11 civilians, including a Japanese cameraman, were killed, according to the government's Erawan emergency center.

The savage fighting erupted after security forces tried to push out demonstrators who have been staging a month of disruptive protests demanding that Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva dissolve Parliament and call new elections.

The demonstrations are part of a long-running battle between the mostly poor and rural supporters of former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, and the ruling elite they say orchestrated the 2006 military coup that removed him from power on corruption allegations.

The protesters, called "Red Shirts" for their garb, see the Oxford-educated Abhisit as a symbol of an elite impervious to the plight of Thailand's poor and claim he took office illegitimately in December 2008 after the military pressured Parliament to vote for him.

Saturday's violence and failure to dislodge the protesters are likely to make it harder to end the political deadlock. Previously, both sides had exercised considerable restraint.

Abhisit "failed miserably," said Michael Nelson, a German scholar of Southeast Asian studies working in Bangkok.

Tanet Charoenmuang, a political scientist at Chiang Mai University sympathetic to the Red Shirt's cause, said he expects the fighting will resume because the protesters are unafraid and the government refused to listen to them.

Abhisit went on national television shortly before midnight to pay condolences to the families of victims and indirectly assert that he would not bow to the protesters' demands.

"The government and I are still responsible for easing the situation and trying to bring peace and order to the country," Abhisit said.

Nelson said he had been hopeful the situation would calm down after the troops pulled back but that Abhisit's TV appearance raised doubts because he seemed "totally defiant."

The army had vowed to clear the protesters out of one of their two bases in Bangkok by nightfall, but the push instead set off street fighting. There was a continuous sound of gunfire and explosions, mostly from Molotov ****tails. After more than two hours of fierce clashes, the soldiers pulled back.

Army spokesman Col. Sansern Kaewkamnerd went on television to ask the protesters to retreat as well. He also accused them of firing live rounds and throwing grenades. An APTN cameraman saw two Red Shirt security guards carrying assault rifles.

At least 678 people were injured, according to the Erawan emergency center. The deaths included Japanese cameraman Hire Muramoto, who worked for Thomson Reuters news agency. In a statement, Reuters said he was shot in the chest.

Most of the fighting took place around Democracy Monument, but spread to the Khao San Road area, a favorite of foreign backpackers.

Soldiers made repeated charges to clear the Red Shirts, while some tourists stood by watching. Two protesters and a Buddhist monk with them were badly beaten by soldiers and taken away by ambulance.

A Japanese tourist who was wearing a red shirt was also clubbed by soldiers until bystanders rescued him.

Thai media reported that several soldiers were captured by the protesters. Red Shirts also staged protests in several other provinces, seizing the provincial hall in the northern city of Chiang Mai, Thaksin's hometown.

On Friday, the police and army failed to prevent demonstrators from breaking into the compound of a satellite transmission station and briefly restarting a pro-Red Shirt television station that had been shut down by the government under a state of emergency. The humiliating rout raised questions about how much control Abhisit has over the police and army.

Thailand's military has traditionally played a major role in politics, staging almost a score of coups since the country became a constitutional monarchy in 1932.

The Red Shirts have a second rally site in the heart of Bangkok's upscale shopping district, and more troops were sent there Saturday as well. The city's elevated mass transit system known as the Skytrain, which runs past that site, stopped running and closed all its stations.

Merchants say the demonstrations have cost them hundreds of millions of baht (tens of millions of dollars), and luxury hotels near the site have been under virtual siege.

Arrest warrants have been issued for 27 Red Shirt leaders, but none is known to have been taken into custody.




 



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http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=4CA3FF5D9B4ECF1A













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Kon Esan

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 Why Abhisit  is afraid of the election ?  Why Abhisit does not want to united the Thai people and end to this crisis?

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