Thai protest leader shot in head

The founder of Thailand's "yellow shirt" protest movement, which was behind the week-long occupation of Bangkok's main airports…

The founder of Thailand's "yellow shirt" protest movement, which was behind the week-long occupation of Bangkok's main airports last year, has survived being shot in the head.

The assassination attempt came hours before the government extended a state of emergency in the capital at a cabinet meeting to discuss the past week's political violence. It also agreed to increase government borrowing to support the beleaguered economy.

Sondhi Limthongkul received a head wound but survived after gunmen riddled his car with bullets at a petrol station before dawn.

"He is safe now and able to talk," said Dr Chaiwan Chareonchoktawee, director of Vajira hospital, after Mr Sondhi had an operation to remove bullet fragments and bits of skull bone.

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Other leaders of Mr Sondhi's People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD), which was not involved in the political unrest that prompted the state of emergency, told their supporters to remain calm.

Mr Sondhi's yellow-shirted PAD is a motley collection of royalists, academics, ex-military people and Bangkok's middle classes united in their loathing of former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who was deposed in a 2006 military coup and lives in self-imposed exile.

Mr Thaksin's red-shirted supporters invaded and caused the cancellation of a summit of Asian leaders in Thailand last weekend and then staged protests in Bangkok in which two people were killed before being ended on Tuesday.

PAD leaders denounced the failure of the security services to prevent the attack on Sondhi, especially as security was supposed to be tight under the emergency, and called for the national police chief to be sacked.

But they told their members to be calm and did not call for action, other than the continuation of a series of local rallies, the next to be held on the tourist island of Phuket tomorrow.

Bangkok Metropolitan Police Commissioner Vorapong Chiewpreecha told television that 84 spent cartridges were found at the scene of the assassination attempt."We also found an M-79 grenade that was fired but missed Mr. Sondhi's vehicle. It hit a passing public bus but did not go off," he said.

Mr Sondhi's driver was seriously wounded and his bodyguard suffered minor injuries.