Shots fired in Bangkok after day of violence, blazes

BANGKOK, (Reuters) – Thai troops fired into the air  today (last night local time) as they approached a temple where several hundred  “red shirt” protesters had sought shelter after security forces  dispersed them a day before and their leaders surrendered.  

Fires were still burning in central Bangkok after an  overnight curfew that followed a day of riots and arson in  which health officials said at least seven people were killed.  

The Erawan Emergency Medical Centre also said 81 people  were wounded in the fighting at the protesters’ camp in a  commercial district in the heart of the capital and in  skirmishes that broke out around the city. 

It was uncertain whether the rioting represented a final  outpouring of protesters’ anger or whether it would intensify  in days ahead. 

A Reuters photographer said the protesters at the temple,  including many women and children, ran in fright at the sound  of the gunshots. A Reuters reporter said there were at least  six bodies at the site, which appeared to have been there some  time.  

An Erawan official said she was aware of nine bodies  reported to be in a temple inside the protest site, but rescue  workers had so far been unable to get there. 

The authorities said late on Wednesday that 27 buildings  were set on fire by protesters, including Central World,  Southeast Asia’s second-biggest department store complex, which  was gutted and looked close to collapse.  

A spokesman for Bangkok’s governor said there were 31 fires  by Thursday morning, around half at banks but also including a  mall in the protest camp area, where a fire had been started  around midnight, after the curfew started at 8 p.m. (1300 GMT). 

A small fire was started in the stock exchange yesterday. The market will be closed today and tomorrow and  the Bank of Thailand said banks around the country would also  stay shut. The whole week has been declared a public holiday in  an effort to keep people out of central Bangkok.

The curfew in the capital, in the grip of protests by “red  shirt” activists for weeks, was lifted at 6 a.m. (2300 GMT yesterday). Buses began running but it was unclear if the mass  transit rail system would be reopened.
Television channels have been ordered to only air  programmes approved by the authorities. 

The “red shirt” protesters are mostly drawn from the rural  and urban poor and largely back former Prime Minister Thaksin  Shinawatra, a populist tycoon who was ousted in a 2006 coup and  now lives in self-imposed exile to avoid a jail term for graft.  

They started demonstrating in mid-March, demanding that the  government step down and new elections be held. More than 70  people have been killed and nearly 2,000 wounded since then.
Thaksin said the crackdown could spawn guerrilla warfare.  

“There is a theory saying a military crackdown can spread  resentment and these resentful people will become guerrillas,”  he told Reuters by telephone from an undisclosed location. 

Early this month, Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva had  offered an election in November, just over a year before he  needed to call one, but talks foundered and that offer is now  off the table. 

Troops moved in to clear out the demonstrators early on  Wednesday and several “red shirt” leaders surrendered. The  security forces continued their operation during the night,  authorised to shoot looters and arsonists.  

“In many places, armed elements have prevented officials  from helping the people,” Abhisit said in a televised statement  late on Wednesday, adding he was determined to end the problem  and “return the country to peace and order once again”.
Authorities imposed the curfew on 24 provinces — about a  third of the total — after outbursts of unrest in seven  regions, particularly in the north, a “red shirt” stronghold.  Town halls were set alight in three northern areas.  

The protesters say Abhisit lacks a proper mandate after  coming to power in a controversial parliamentary vote in 2006  with tacit military support.