
Troops opened fire in a tense stand off with protesters in the capital on Friday, where the army vowed to clear an area after clashes on Thursday left one dead and a renegade general fighting for his life. One man died from a bullet wound to the chest.
A succession of gunshots that sent residents fleeing in panic were heard close to the Suan Lum Night Bazaar, on Rama IV Road, which is popular with tourists. Protesters set fire to an empty police bus and vandalised army vehicles and a fire truck with a water cannon.
Troops were seen firing into nearby Lumpini Park, close to the anti-government red shirts' sprawling encampment, which has been fortified with razor wire, truck tyres and sharpened bamboo poles.
It was not clear if the troops were firing live ammunition, but the army has warned it would use lethal force against "terrorist elements".
After troops fired tear gas at the protesters at Witthayu intersection, protesters responded by burning a police truck and tyres outside the night bazaar, causing thick, black smoke.
A line of about 100 soldiers carrying assault rifles was seen near the park, an AFP reporter said. Three red shirts were seen being detained by the security forces.
Army spokesman Col Sansern Kaewkamnerd said there were about 2,000 red shirt protesters in that area and they had 'intimidated authorities with weapons' so an order was given Friday morning to disperse them.
The clashes resulted in one death.
The director of Kluay Namthai Hospital, Dr Suwinai Busarakamwong, said Intaeng Teswong, 33, was shot in the chest and died at the hospital.
Reports said he was shot during the clash on Rama IV Road near Lumpini boxing stadium.
Local media reported that four people were wounded during the clashes, but a Bangkok Post photographer said he had seen at least 10 people injured.
Matichon newspaper reported on its website that its cameraman was shot in the leg during the clashes.
France 24 television channel reported that its foreign journalist was shot in the leg during the clashes.
Around the wider protest area, which extends for several square kilometres, soldiers blocked roads and set up checkpoints to seal off the area.
Skytrain services were shutdown in the protest area, with trains running shuttle services between outlying stations. The management announced it would suspend services at 4pm Friday.
The subway service was also partially shut down, with trains operating only between Rama 9 station and Bang Sue.
Security forces shut down both sides of Rama IV road from Sala Daeng to Klong Toey after clashes between anti-government protesters and soldiers around noon.
"The total seal-off measure was implemented yesterday evening," said Col Sansern. Electricity had been cut off in the area
"Today we will meet to assess the effectiveness of these measures," he said.
The army warned on Thursday it would deploy snipers around the reds' protest site and use armoured vehicles to prevent more demonstrators joining thousands who have turned a large area of central Bangkok into occupied territory for two months, crippling an upscale retail district.
Today's action followed the shooting early Thursday night of rogue army officer Maj-Gen Khattiya Sawasdipol, or Seh Daeng, a hardline red shirt supporter accused of trying to stymie government efforts to reconcile with the protesters.
He was unconscious in the intensive care unit of Vahira hospital with a "quite low" chance of survival from a head wound, the hospital director, Dr Chaiwan Charoenchokethavee, said.
Another demonstrator died after being shot in the head in clashes with security forces Thursday night. Eleven others were wounded, the Medical Service said.
Core members of the United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship (UDD) had publicly distanced themselves from Maj-Gen Khattiya, but after his shooting aprotest leader vowed there would be no surrender.
"If you think the shooting of Seh Daeng will scare the leaders and they won't dare the stage, you are wrong," opposition Puea Thai Party MP Jatuporn Prompan said at the rally site. "We will not leave here as losers."
The army denied involvement in the shooting, with a spokesman blaming it on an "invisible hand" he admitted would be hard to identify.
Black-clad guards at entrances to the sprawling protest site in central Bangkok were armed with slingshots and arrows. They sealed the access at one main entrance and reinforced another position with sandbags.
Some military humvees were on the street, but no armoured vehicles were seen as troops set up checkpoints.
The fresh violence came after Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva shelved a plan to hold early elections on Nov 14 and hopes faded for a resolution to the crippling political crisis.
The red-shirts, who launched their campaign in mid-March for immediate elections, initially agreed to enter the peace process but efforts to reach a deal that would see them go home eventually broke down.
The red-shirts say the government is undemocratic because it came to power in a 2008 parliamentary vote after a court ruling ousted elected allies of their hero, former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, who was unseated in a 2006 coup.
Bracing for further possible unrest, the government on Thursday extended a state of emergency to 15 more provinces. Almost one-third of the country including Bangkok is now under emergency rule.
At least 30 people have been killed and about 1,000 injured in Bangkok in a series of confrontations and attacks since the protests began _ Thailand's worst political violence in almost two decades.
The photo gallery below shows the atmosphere on Rama IV Road where another stand-off between anti-government protesters and troops erupted on Friday.
From : Bnagkok Post
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