Crowds demand release of Thai rebel leaders

AYUTTHAYA, Thailand – Thousands of anti-government “red shirts” demonstrated in the old Thai capital of Ayutthaya yesterday to…

AYUTTHAYA, Thailand – Thousands of anti-government “red shirts” demonstrated in the old Thai capital of Ayutthaya yesterday to demand the release of their leaders and scores of comrades detained since bloody protests in April and May.

By 5pm local time, witnesses estimated a crowd of some 10,000 had assembled in the town, 76km (47 miles) north of Bangkok, for the group’s third big rally since September 19th and the latest sign of its revival since a military crackdown in May.

Hundreds of police were deployed near a football stadium where the main rally was taking place.

“We don’t have leaders today. We are here on our own, the CRES can’t arrest us,” one speaker said from a makeshift stage, referring to the Centre for the Resolution of the Emergency Situation set up to co-ordinate the authorities’ handling of the Bangkok protests.

READ MORE

The capital, unlike Ayutthaya, is still under a state of emergency after 10 weeks of paralysing protests in April and May that ended with 91 people being killed and nearly 2,000 injured.

Political gatherings are banned under the emergency.

Some 2,400 troops and police were reported to have been deployed in Bangkok earlier as the red shirts, a movement of predominantly poor urban and rural workers, had threatened to hold a “mobile rally”, with supporters riding around town before heading to Ayutthaya. No incidents were reported.

The red shirts are demanding that those behind the deaths in April and May be brought to justice. The authorities, on the other hand, accuse the red shirt leaders of “terrorism”, which led to the deaths and rioting.

Red shirt supporters in the crowd in Ayutthaya called for an amnesty for their leaders, who have been detained without trial since May.

Analysts say the revival of the red shirts and the vacuum in their leadership raise the risk of deepening a violent, five-year political crisis.

The government is concerned that radicals could emerge from within the movement to create unrest, pointing to a recent deadly blast in a suburban Bangkok apartment rented by an activist, which was packed with bomb-making material.

The Department of Special Investigation, Thailand’s equivalent of the US’s FBI, said last week that 11 men being held under witness protection and allied with the red shirts had confessed to a plot to assassinate ministers. – (Reuters)