Protesters besiege Thai government

THAILAND: POLITICAL TENSIONS in Thailand grew yesterday when thousands of protesters, demanding that the five-month-old government…

THAILAND:POLITICAL TENSIONS in Thailand grew yesterday when thousands of protesters, demanding that the five-month-old government quit, pushed through police lines to lay siege to Government House.

The demonstrators, who have rallied for 26 straight days in the capital, Bangkok, scuffled with riot police who eventually broke ranks, allowing the protesters through to the country's seat of power.

Last night the leaders of the collection of anti-government groups vowed to remain until the prime minister, Samak Sundaravej - who they regard as a proxy for the deposed prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra - steps down.

Chanting "Get out, get out", the protesters waved flags and swarmed around the wrought-iron railings as riot police looked on casually.

READ MORE

The political drama, which led to falls on the stock market and in the Thai currency, the baht, is also provoking fears of another coup, only months after a general election to restore democracy.

Analysts fear that if the protests degenerate into violence, Thailand's royalist-military elite will use it as an excuse to send troops onto the streets to restore order and unseat the government once again.

But despite tough talk from police chiefs heading the 8,000- strong force that had been brought into Bangkok from all over the country, there were only scuffles and a few minor injuries as the police gave way.

The protesters, headed by the People's Alliance for Democracy, whose months of demonstrations in 2006 eventually led to the coup that ejected Thaksin, converged on the government complex from eight directions. The 1920s buildings house the offices of Samak and his ministers, but yesterday all were elsewhere.

Samak had met King Bhumibol Adulyadej on Thursday in an effort to defuse the tensions, with the monarch urging the prime minister to stand by his pledge to do good for the nation.

"I expect that you will do what you have promised and when you can do that, you will be satisfied," the king told Samak. "With that satisfaction, the country will survive. I ask you to do good in everything, both in government work and other work."

Government offices and schools near the ministerial complex were closed to prevent workers and pupils being caught up in violence.

But for many of the 25,000 protesters, the atmosphere was more carnival than confrontation. Bangkok academics, business people and unionised workers, united in their hatred of Thaksin, roamed Bangkok's old quarter waving flags and banners to symbolise their devotion to the king.

Samak's People Power party, which inherited the mantle of Thaksin's Thai Rak Thai party, won the election in December that ended the rule of the military-appointed government and demonstrated the electorate's disillusionment with the 18 months under the military. -