Monday, November 29, 1999

Final Thai crackdown feared, peace talks founder

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Thailand's government demanded on Monday an end to protests that have killed 37 people in four days of escalating street violence in Bangkok before holding talks with its opponents seeking immediate elections.The government gave an estimated 5,000 people hunkered down in a sprawling protest encampment in central Bangkok until 3 p.m. (0800 GMT) to leave, or face criminal charges.After their plea for a ceasefire and U.N. moderated talks was dismissed by the government on Sunday, the "red shirt" protest leaders on Monday offered talks as long as a neutral arbiter took part and troops withdrew.Government spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn said in response that rioting and violence against troops must end first."The government is ready to go forward with negotiations when the situation is defused, when the protest ends, violence ends, attacks on authorities end."That seemed to leave the talks at a dead end, with both sides demanding the other stops acting violently first.Across the city, people were hoarding food and hotels were pleading for guests to leave. Schools have been closed and while Monday and Tuesday were declared public holidays, markets and banks remained open.Fighting near the protest encampment was intense overnight. A rocket hit the 14th floor of the Dusit Thani Hotel, a Reuters photographer said, triggering gunfire from "all around" in pitch blackness, since power had been cut to the area.Guests at the Dusit were evacuated on Monday morning after spending much of the night cowering in the basement.Fighting spread to two new areas of the city of 15 million people at the weekend as the army struggled -- so far without success -- to impose a security cordon around the encampment, occupying a 3 sq km (1.2 mile) area of the commercial district.A renegade Thai soldier seen as the de facto military adviser to the "red shirts" died, the director of a hospital where he was being treated after an assassination attempt said on Monday.Maj-Gen Khattiya Sawasdipol, better known as Seh Daeng (Commader Red), was shot in the head on Thursday, fueling the latest eruption of violence in a five-year crisis pitting the rural and urban poor against what they call an "establishment elite" that has traditionally run the Kingdom of Thailand.The death of the flamboyant Khattiya, an embarrassment to the fractured Thai military, threatened to further stoke tensions in Bangkok as the government deadline for people to leave the encampment ticked closer.Military helicopters dropped leaflets on the encampment, barricaded with walls made of tyres, bamboo poles and razor wire, calling for protesters to leave immediately.At least 37 people have been killed and 266 injured since then, according to government figures.PLEA TO KINGProtest leader Jatuporn Prompan told supporters in the encampment, including women and children: "The king's glorious mercy is the country's only hope now. It's the only way out."King Bhumibol Aduladej, 82, has stepped in to end past crises during his 63 years on the throne, but has been hospitalised for the past seven months and not publicly commented on the crisis.Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva vowed "no retreat" against "armed terrorists" seeking to topple his government.The "Red shirts", mostly loyal to former premier Thaksin Shinawatra who was ousted in a 2006 coup, say Abhisit's army-backed government, which came to power 18 months ago in a controversial parliament vote, is illegitimate and they want him to call elections now.At least 66 people have been killed and more than 1,600 wounded since the red shirts began their protest in mid-March."We can't see when the turmoil will end now, and it seems the situation is just getting fiercer," said Kavee Chukitkasem research head at Kasikorn Securities. "Protesters are separating to many different spots and the government isn't retreating."A state of emergency has spread to more than a quarter of the country after emergency decrees were declared in five more provinces on Sunday, bringing the total to 22, as violence erupted in the north and northeast, a Thaksin stronghold home to just over half of Thailand's 67 million people.Police in eastern Chonburi province said hundreds gathered overnight and were attempting to block off a major port. A protest leader there threatened to set an oil tanker afire if the government moves on the Bangkok encampment.Analysts and diplomats said the military had underestimated the resolve of "red shirt" protesters who have taken over a district of luxury hotels and shopping malls since April 3.(Additional reporting by Jason Szep, Ploy Ten Kate, Khettiya Jittapong, Panarat Thepgumpanat and Martin Petty; Editing by David Fox)

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