Thai protesters preparing for imminent battle in central Bangkok, agree to release military train
April 23, 2010 00:00:00
A seller brought a 42-kg pumpkin of hybrid variety to Shantinagar Kitchen Market in the city Thursday. — Banglar Chokh
BANGKOK, Apr 22 (agencies): The anti-government red-shirted protesters in Thailand's northeast province of Khon Kaen Thursday's afternoon agreed to release their blockade of the military train bounded for reinforcement in southern Thailand, the website of The Nation's newspaper reported.
Hundreds of protesters Wednesday afternoon blocked the train from leaving Khon Kaen following community radio said that the soldiers and military supplies might be diverted to disperse their fellow protesters in Bangkok instead of fighting insurgency in southern Thailand.
The train is carrying 24 Humvy military vehicles, military trucks and water cannon cars, as well as military equipment which belong to the 8th Infantry Regiment in Khon Kaen province.
Under the deal, the military agreed for 10 red-shirts to accompany the train to ensure it reaching the destination in the Deep South.
Earlier report adds: Anti-government red-shirt protesters Thursday blocked the rail line to Bangkok in northeast province of Khon Kaen to prevent departure of a military train for a second day, police said.
Hundreds of protesters on Wednesday afternoon blocked the train from leaving Khon Kaen following community radio said that the soldiers and military supplies might be diverted to disperse their fellow protesters in Bangkok instead of fighting insurgency in southern Thailand.
Meanwhile: Thailand's tense political standoff was nearing a climax Thursday with anti-government protesters preparing for imminent battle in central Bangkok against tens of thousands of armed troops.
The "red shirt" uprising showed the first signs of spreading beyond Bangkok to the protesters' stronghold in the northeast after they blocked a train carrying troops and military vehicles.
Tens of thousands of red-shirted supporters of former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra have fortified their redoubt in a Bangkok commercial district with home-made barricades, expecting the army to evict them any time.
"We've heard from insiders in the government that April 26 is their deadline," Kwanchai Sarakam, 57, a red shirt leader from the northeast told Reuters.
Neither side shows any sign of backing down after the army's chaotic attempt to evict protesters from another site on April 10 that led to the deaths of 25 people and wounded more than 800.
Red shirt leaders say another such attempt would be futile. They say they will only leave Bangkok when the prime minister announces a dissolution of parliament and early elections.
"I'm sending a signal (by remaining at the site and fortifying it) that I want to see their cards," said Nattawut Saikuar, one of the three top red shirt leaders, on Wednesday. "You cannot issue an order because the soldiers won't listen," he added, citing last Friday's bungled attempt to arrest red shirt leaders as an example.
The central bank left interest rates at a record low on Wednesday, noting political risks were "affecting confidence, tourism, private consumption and investment".
Any attempt to disperse the protesters risks heavy casualties and the prospect of clashes spilling into nearby high-end residential areas. It may also lead the red shirts to step up action elsewhere in the country, particularly in their strongholds in the north and northeast where there has been little unrest so far in the six-week campaign.
"The risk for Abhisit is that even a successful dispersal, while assuring the near-term survival of his government, will not in any way ease-and in fact may even worsen-the disenchantment of the red-shirts," risk consultancy Eurasia Group said in a note. "In that case, their next rally, and the next round of volatility, will only be a matter of time."
Thai media reported that a "multi-coloured" pro-government group planned a demonstration of up to 100,000 people on Friday demanding a dispersal of the red shirts, splitting the capital into opposing groups.
This group includes office workers, shopkeepers, the middle class and members of the pro-government "yellow shirts' who staged their own paralysing protests in Bangkok two years ago to force the ouster of a Thaksin-allied government.
About 200 red shirt protesters rallied in front of the regional headquarters of the United Nations in Bangkok on Thursday requesting peacekeepers be deployed to provide security. Police made no move to stop them.
Some red shirt leaders suggested on Wednesday they might consider a three-month timeframe for Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva to dissolve parliament and call elections.
But the movement is led by a 22-member committee that often sends mixed signals on its positions. They all agree, however, a crackdown is imminent and they are preparing for battle.
The army spokesman said around 900 fully armed troops on motorcycles would be deployed around the red shirt rally site at the Rachaprasong intersection to keep them going elsewhere, and checkpoints have been strengthened in Bangkok to stop red shirt reinforcements from coming into the capital.