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Thailand's Red Shirts mark coup anniversary

Associated Press - September 19, 2010

Thanyarat Doksone, Bangkok – Anti-government "Red Shirt" protesters defied an ongoing state of emergency in Thailand's capital on Sunday to stage their first major mobilization since their street demonstrations were ended by a deadly military crackdown in May.

The activities marked the fourth anniversary of a 2006 military coup that toppled former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra. The Red Shirts include many Thaksin supporters as well as activists opposed to the military's interference in politics.

Thousands of people gathered Sunday at Bangkok's Rajprasong intersection, a glitzy shopping district that was occupied by the group from April to May this year. The crowd, exuberant but peaceful, spilled into the street and snarled traffic, while hundreds of police stood by in case of trouble.

A smaller crowd turned out at Democracy Monument, a traditional gathering point for demonstrations which was also the site of a clash between the Red Shirts and soldiers in April.

Another large demonstration was scheduled for later Sunday in the northern city of Chiang Mai, Thaksin's hometown and one of his political strongholds.

The Red Shirt protests earlier this year, which demanded that Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva call early elections, deteriorated into violence that turned many parts of Bangkok into a virtual war zone, leaving about 90 people dead and more than 1,400 hurt, mostly demonstrators.

When troops moved in with live ammunition to clear the demonstrators on May 19, hardcore protesters set fire to almost three dozen buildings around Bangkok, including the country's biggest luxury shopping mall and the stock exchange.

Bangkok remains under a state of emergency imposed in April that gives the military broad powers, and soldiers have been deployed at key locations over the past two weeks as the government warned of possible violence around the coup anniversary.

Thaksin was ousted by the Sept. 19, 2006, coup after being accused of corruption and disrespect to Thailand's constitutional monarch, King Bhumibol Adulyadej. The army acted after a series of protests and court rulings nearly paralyzed Thaksin's ability to govern.

Although the coup was supposed to restore stability, it instead sharply polarized society.

Many of Thaksin's supporters come from the rural poor who benefited from his social welfare policies and remain bitter over his ouster through undemocratic means.

Many of his opponents, including members of the urban middle class and elite, see him as a threat to democracy and view his populist brand of politics as a danger to their own privileges.

In 2008, Thaksin opponents seized the prime minister's offices for three months and occupied Bangkok's two airports for a week to try to force a pro-Thaksin government out of office.

The Red Shirts allege that military and parliamentary maneuvering brought Abhisit to power in December 2008.

Thaksin is living in exile abroad after fleeing in 2008 ahead of a corruption conviction. He supports the Red Shirts but denies accusations that he instigated the violence.

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