Thai protesters leave PM's office after attacks
THAILAND: Thai protesters Monday began leaving the Prime Minister's
offices after a three-month sit-in, moving instead to reinforce a
paralysing anti-government blockade of Bangkok's two airports.
Leaders of an alliance trying to force Premier Somchai Wongsawat to
resign said they were worried by recent grenade attacks which have
killed two protesters and wounded dozens more at Government House in the
capital.
In another apparent climbdown, the People's Alliance for Democracy
(PAD) allowed 37 empty aircraft to fly out of Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi
international airport in the past two days.
"It's too risky to stay at Government House because of repeated
attacks against us," PAD spokeswoman Anchalee Paireerak said. "All of us
have started to move now. We expect to complete the movement this
evening."
An AFP reporter saw dozens of supporters carrying plastic bags and
sleeping mats leaving the compound, which protesters had heavily
fortified with razor wire and tyres.
The PAD seized the cabinet offices in late August, as part of a
campaign they launched in May to topple an elected government they
accuse of running the country on behalf of former premier Thaksin
Shinawatra, ousted in a 2006 coup.
They took that campaign to unexpected heights last week, storming the
main international airport on Tuesday and then occupying the older Don
Mueang domestic airport the next day.
The abandonment of the premier's offices will likely ease the risk of
clashes with a rival pro-government group who camped out in Bangkok for
a second day a few kilometres (miles) from Government House.
About 15,000 red-shirted pro-government activists had converged on
city hall in downtown Bangkok on Sunday night, and around 1,500 of them
remained there on Monday morning, police said.
"We will rally again this afternoon at the same place," Chinawat
Haboonpard, a leader of the pro-government group, told AFP.
Chinawat said the group had not yet decided whether to launch a
blockade of the Constitutional Court, which is due Tuesday to wrap up a
case that could see the ruling party disbanded for vote fraud and
Somchai banned from politics.
Bangkok, Monday, AFP
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