Thai protesters clash with riot police - Action News
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Thai protesters clash with riot police

Thai anti-government protesters storm into a telecom company compound where their vital TV channel had been shut down and clash with riot police and soldiers armed with tear gas and water cannons.
Anti-government protesters struggle with soldiers Friday at Thaicom Teleport on the outskirts of Bangkok in Thailand's Pathum Thani province. ((Vivek Prakash/Reuters))
Thai protesters stormed Friday into a telecom company compound where authorities had shut down their vital TV channel, as soldiers and riot police failed to hold them back with tear gas and water cannons.

The so-called Red Shirt protesters then negotiated with police to return People Channel to the air, and the security forces and protesters withdrew from the compound side by side.

The assault was another blow to the government after a month of protests aimed at ousting Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva and forcing new elections. At least 10 protesters and three security personnel were injured in the brief confrontation in a northern Bangkok suburb, a local newspaper reported.

Hurling rocks and Molotov cocktails, the protesters breached the barbed-wire perimeter of Thaicom Public Co. Ltd. within minutes but did not enter the main building. As they moved into the compound, security forces threw tear gas canisters and fired water cannons but then quickly retreated into the main building as thousands of protesters swarmed around it.

People Channel, orPTV,was back on the air Friday afternoon, but government spokesperson Panitan Wattanayagorn told The Associated Press the signal remained under government control.

"We are still controlling any news reporting that distorts facts," Panitan said.

Anti-government protesters on motorcycles ride past the Victory Monument in Bangkok on Friday on their way to a demonstration at a telecom company. ((Sukree Sukplang/Reuters))
After the clash, some security forces were seen throwing down their shields and riot gear and shaking hands with the protesters. In recent weeks, police have frequently shown sympathy with the protesters, and analysts say the security forces, especially the police, are split in their loyalties, making it difficult for the government to enforce its orders.

The Red Shirts offered water to soldiers and police and showed reporters a small cache of weapons, including M-16 assault rifles, they had seized from soldiers.

More protests planned

"We've got the upper hand," said Thep Jitra, one of the protesters. "But we no longer can claim we are peaceful."

More protests are planned as the anti-government activists continue to push the prime minister to dissolve the government. The escalating 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.

They claim he took office illegitimately in December 2008 with the help of military pressure on parliament.

Columns of protesters, riding motorcycles and pickup trucks, blared horns and waved red flags as they moved out of their two main encampments and headed north 45 kilometres to the offices of Thaicom in the suburb of Pathum Thani.

Thaicom, which relayed the People Channel signal via satellite, was founded by Thaksin, a telecommunications tycoon turned politician. He no longer owns it.

The government security agency estimated that 15,000 people were in the motorized caravan, but army spokesperson Col. Sansern Kaewkamnerd placed the number at about 3,000. Both figures are far below the biggest estimated turnout of about 100,000 during the early days of the protests last month.

People Channel was set up and financed by Red Shirt sympathizers. A number of small community radio stations also are allied with the protesters, who also use cellphones and social networking to communicate.

The protesters have camped in Bangkok's historic district since March 12 and have occupied the capital's main shopping boulevard since Saturday, forcing the closure of major shopping malls and causing tens of millions of dollars in losses.

On Friday, the Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for three leaders for seizing the commercial district, the official Thai News Agency said. A total of 27 warrants have now been issued but no leaders are known to have been taken into custody.

Abhisit declared a state of emergency on Wednesday after a group of protesters briefly stormed parliament on Wednesday, forcing officials to flee over a back wall and by helicopters. The emergency decree allows authorities to impose curfews, ban public gatherings, censor media and detain suspects without charge for 30 days.