'Red Shirts' gather to rally against Thai govt


About 12,000 "Red Shirt" protesters loyal to fugitive premier Thaksin Shinawatra gathered in Bangkok Saturday as the Thai capital braced for the biggest rally since bloody riots two months ago.

Police said the red-clad crowd began to gather from mid-afternoon in the historic quarter of the city, as they estimated up to 50,000 people could turn up despite heavy rains.

The group have said they would stay at the site until dawn on Sunday to demand that Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva dissolves the House and calls fresh elections.

"I think hundreds of thousands of our red shirt protesters across the country will turn out for today's demonstration," protest leader Jatuporn Prompan told AFP.

The leaders have promised a peaceful demonstration but the government has vowed to take a tough stance on any trouble and police said more than 3,000 officers and 1,000 soldiers were on hand to guard government offices.

"The situation at the rally site so far is peaceful and orderly. The police are searching for weapons and are on alert for any instigators of violence," local police commander Colonel King Kwaengwisetchaicharn told AFP.

Many of the protesters at the site held up placards with slogans attacking the government and pictures of their hero Thaksin.

But Jatuporn complained to reporters that "fake red shirts" had infiltrated the rally to incite unrest.

Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thaugsuban has placed the national police chief in control of security but said he had drafted a document to invoke an internal security law that gives more power to the army in case the rally turns sour.

Major General Suporn Phansua told AFP that police estimated 30,000 to 50,000 protesters, mostly from Bangkok and surrounding provinces, would show.

Thaksin, currently living in Dubai to escape a jail sentence for corruption, is due to telephone Saturday's rally at around 8:30pm 1330 GMT.

"Thaksin... will talk about the government's failure to solve the economic crisis and may rebut the government's allegation that the red shirts plan to incite violence in the city," Jatuporn added.

The Red Shirts stormed a key Asian summit on the Thai coast on April 11, forcing its cancellation, before rampaging through the capital, leaving two people dead and 123 injured, and prompting Abhisit to declare emergency rule.

Protesters clashed with security forces in Bangkok over two days but finally dispersed after troops surrounded them and threatened to move them by force.

British-born Abhisit is on an official visit to China and due to return late Saturday.

Since Thaksin's ouster in a coup in 2006, Thai society has been deeply split between his supporters among the largely rural poor and the powerful Bangkok cliques in the palace, military and bureaucracy.

The kingdom has been wracked for months by rival rallies.

Thaksin has made repeated addresses to his grassroots supporters in the kingdom's northeast in recent months, telling them he is homesick and wants to return to work in Thailand.



The sun sets over the New York City skyline on June 26. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson

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