Thai police move on protesters; 4 die, 64 hurt

An anti-government protester is caught in tear gas during clashes with riot police in Bangkok on Tuesday. Clashes between police and anti-government demonstrators in Bangkok left four people dead and dozens injured Tuesday as riot police attempted to clear out protest camps around the Thai capital.
An anti-government protester is caught in tear gas during clashes with riot police in Bangkok on Tuesday. Clashes between police and anti-government demonstrators in Bangkok left four people dead and dozens injured Tuesday as riot police attempted to clear out protest camps around the Thai capital.

BANGKOK - Gunbattles broke out Tuesday as hundreds of riot police made their strongest attempt to clear anti-government protest sites around Thailand’s capital, leaving at least four people dead and 64 injured.

Multiple gunshots were heard near the prime minister’s offices, where riot police wearing helmets and bullet-resistant vests had started to remove protesters and dismantle a makeshift stage. Witnesses said a grenade was thrown at the police and shots were then fired by both sides. The police withdrew after a series of clashes.

In another blow for Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, the state anti-corruption agency accused her on Tuesday of improperly handling an expensive rice-subsidy scheme, putting her in jeopardy of being impeached.

The National Anti-Corruption Commission said Yingluck’s government proceeded with the scheme despite advice from experts thatit was potentially wasteful and prone to corruption. The government has been months late in making payments to farmers for the rice it pledged to sell at above-market prices.

The commission said Yingluck has been called to formally hear the charges on Feb.

  1. If it decides to submit the case to the Senate for possible impeachment, Yingluck will immediately be suspended from performing her official duties pending a Senate trial.

In regard to the protests, Yingluck’s elected government has been attempting to avoid violence to keep the powerful military from stepping in.

Thailand has been wracked by political unrest since 2006, when Yingluck’s brother, former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, was ousted by a military coup after being accused of corruption and abuse of power. Since then, his supporters and opponents have vied for power, sometimes violently.

Erawan emergency medical services said three civilians and a police officer died and 64 were injured in Tuesday’s clashes, including journalists covering the protests for a Hong Kong TV station and the Spanish news agency EFE.

The violence began after police moved into several locations around the city to detain and remove protesters who have been camped out for weeks to press for Yingluck’s resignation. They want the formation of an unelected people’s council to implement changes to end corruption and remove her family from politics.

They have blocked access to government offices since late last year and occupied key intersections around Bangkok for about a month. Until now, the police had refrained from dispersing them for fear of unleashing violence.

But on Monday, the government’s special security command center announced it would reclaim five protest sites around the city for public use, a move made possible under a state of emergency declared in January. Thousands of police officers, including armed anti-riot squads, were deployed across the cityTuesday in an operation the government called Peace for Bangkok.

Earlier Tuesday, 144 protesters near the Energy Ministry in the northern part of the city were peacefully detained and herded onto police trucks to be taken away for questioning, Department of Special Investigation Chief Tharit Pengdit said.

Transport Minister Chadchart Sittipunt said the protesters hijacked two of the city’s public buses and used them to block a rally site at the Interior Ministry near the Grand Palace.

Protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban said in his nightly speech to followers that they should go today to harass Yingluck at her temporary office at the Defense Ministry.

“We will pursue her everywhere, anywhere, anytime, all the time,” he said. “We are on a mission to follow and chase Yingluck the murderer out of this country. It is time to run this she-devil out of our native land!” The Civil Court is to rule today on the government’s invocation of the emergency decree, which allows authorities to exercise wide powers to detain protesters and hold them in custody for 30 days without charges.

If the decree is struck down by the court, the government will be forced to dismantle the special security command center it has set up to enforce the emergency measures.

The ongoing rice scandal has created tumult in state banks, from which the government is seeking loans to pay off money owed to farmers.

A deal to have the Bank for Agriculture and Agricultural Cooperatives borrow as much as $625 million from the Government Savings Bank was scuttled after a run on the savings bank by depositors sympathetic to the anti-government cause.

The savings bank requested the return of $156 million already loaned, and its president resigned Tuesday to take responsibility for the situation.

Information for this article was contributed by Wally Santana and Chalida Ekvitthayavechnukul of The Associated Press.

Front Section, Pages 4 on 02/19/2014

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