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Transit Shutdowns Fail To Deter Pro-Democracy Protests

Pro-democracy protesters march during a protest in Udom Suk, suburbs of Bangkok, Thailand, Saturday, Oct. 17, 2020. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)

BANGKOK (AP) — Pro-democracy activists in Thailand staged a fourth straight day of high-profile protests in the capital on Saturday, thwarting efforts by the authorities to stop them, including a shutdown of the city’s mass transit systems.

Unlike protests a day earlier, in which police used a water cannon to disperse protesters, Saturday’s demonstrations were peaceful, with no reports of any clashes by the time participants started heading home in the evening.

The protesters are calling for Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha to leave office, the constitution to be amended to make it more democratic and the nation’s monarchy to undergo reform.

All stations of Bangkok’s elevated Skytrain transit system were closed Saturday afternoon to try to keep protesters from gathering. The underground MRT system was also shut, and police blocked off several roads.

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Pro-democracy protesters march during a protest in Udom Suk, suburbs of Bangkok, Thailand, Saturday, Oct. 17, 2020. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)

Protesters met anyway as planned at the Skytrain stations, where they held small impromptu rallies, in effect establishing a temporary but active presence across the city.

The organizers then issued a fresh advisory for followers to gather at three stations outside the city’s central area, where access was easier. Once that was announced, money was pooled by participants so they could take taxis to get around the transit shutdown.

“Right now we can do nothing much,” said a 26-year-old hotel worker who asked to be called only Veronica. “What we can do right now is only show our power to let the outside see.”

Several thousand people gathered in multiple locations, with some taking turns airing their views over a megaphone. By the evening, police had not disturbed them, even when some groups took to marching in the street. Protesters began dispersing at 8 p.m., the time organizers had said the protests would end.

The protesters acted despite a state of emergency imposed by Prayuth on Thursday that makes them all subject to arrest.

They also appeared not to be cowed by a crackdown on their rally in central Bangkok on Friday night, in which riot police backed up by water cannons cleared the streets in about an hour.

No major injuries were reported from that confrontation. It was the first time in three months of sporadic protests that the authorities have employed such forceful tactics against the student-led movement.

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Pro-democracy protesters gather during a protest in Bangkok, Thailand, Saturday, Oct. 17, 2020. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

A 20-year-old student who used the name Ryo said Friday night’s events had hardened his resistance.

“I respect people’s political opinions, but after yesterday’s incident, I feel it was so harsh, perpetrating violence against unarmed people who had no weapons to fight back,” he said.

Protective gear such as goggles was distributed Saturday at some venues.

Friday night’s violent dispersal led the People’s Party, the protesters’ umbrella organization, to declare in a statement that “the government and military have established themselves as the enemy of the people,” Most of the group’s top leaders have been arrested.

The protesters have been doing their best to elude the authorities, using social media to assemble followers before police have time to block them. The government has announced plans to take legal action against Twitter and Facebook accounts that announce the protests, but fresh calls to action were posted Saturday.

The protesters charge that Prayuth, who as army commander led a 2014 coup that toppled an elected government, was returned to power unfairly in last year’s general election because laws had been changed to favor a pro-military party. The protesters say a constitution promulgated under military rule and passed in a referendum in which campaigning against it was illegal is undemocratic.

The call by the protesters for reform of the monarchy has significantly raised the political temperature in Thailand, angering many older conservative Thais for whom any critical discussion of the royal family is tantamount to treason.

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Pro-democracy protesters gather during a protest near a main train station in Bangkok, Thailand, Saturday, Oct. 17, 2020. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

King Maha Vajiralongkorn and other key members of the royal family are protected by a lese majeste law that has regularly been used to silence critics who risk up to 15 years in prison if deemed to have insulted the institution.

Prayuth’s declaration of a state of emergency said the measure was necessary because “certain groups of perpetrators intended to instigate an untoward incident and movement in the Bangkok area by way of various methods and via different channels, including causing obstruction to the royal motorcade.”

He was referring to an incident Wednesday that showed some members of a small crowd heckling a motorcade carrying Queen Suthida and Prince Dipangkorn as it slowly passed.

On Friday, two activists were arrested under a law covering violence against the queen for their alleged part in the incident. They could face up to life in prison if convicted. They denied any wrongdoing.

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Editorial: Prayut Has Lost All Legitimacy. He Must Go.

Police crackdown on pro-democracy protesters on Oct. 16, 2020.

PM Prayut Chan-o-cha’s unilateral declaration of a new emergency decree giving him absolute power without any oversight, and tonight’s attacks on unarmed protesters prove that he is unfit to rule.

Many Thais gave a free pass to Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha, a former junta leader who first came to power in May 2014, when he enacted the Emergency Decree in March with a stated purpose of combating the coronavirus outbreak at the time.

The emergency rule granted him sweeping power, namely the authority to ban gatherings, impose curfews, and censor the media, though the government insisted the law was mostly for guiding state agencies to fight the virus in an effective manner.

PM Prayut was also allowed to extend the decree multiple times – the last time being in late September – relatively without major resistance, even as the threat of coronavirus was winding down.

But as the pandemic subsided, dissent against Prayut’s government skyrocketed. Reasons would be left for historians to debate in the years to come, but most obvious causes are probably the economic malaise, Prayut’s lengthy stay in power, and the growing calls to reform the monarchy.

Although officials insisted back in July that the Emergency Decree would no longer ban protests, the opposite happened. Protests against PM Prayut were branded by the government as violating the decree, sometimes attached with threats that coronavirus could spread in the crowd. Meanwhile, government officials gathered without wearing masks or social distancing in several key events.

After a series of demonstrations in Bangkok, some of them drawing tens of thousands, the retired army general’s authoritarian streak finally showed beyond all reasonable doubt when he escalated the emergency decree and invoked the “Severe State of Emergency” in the early hours of Oct. 15, 2020.

Since then, the following events have taken place:

• Police attacked and dispersed demonstrators outside Government House before dawn on Oct. 15, even as the protesters were in the process of packing up and leaving the site as requested by their leaders.

• All forms of protests and public challenges against his government are banned. Violations are punishable by up to two years in prison. A police spokesman said “every demonstrator” at a protest will be prosecuted – denoting the government’s mentality that sees little difference between civilians and criminals.

• Soldiers were sent to garrison the Parliament building and lawmakers told to suspend all sessions that “involved politics,” effectively trampling Legislative power.

• Up to 101 law professors and political scientists submitted an open letter questioning the legality of the Severe State of Emergency, since it was enacted without clear signs of critical threats to national security such as terror attacks or widespread violence.

• Riot police, armed with batons, shields and a water truck carrying teargas agents dispersed a gathering where thousands of demonstrators were assembling in peace and without weapons on Oct. 16. The crackdown is an attack on citizens who were exercising rights and liberty protected by the Constitution. A civil rights group said at least 100 people were arrested.

• A reporter, who was clearly identifying himself as a member of the press, was arrested as he was covering the crackdown. Police said the journalist violated the Emergency Decree’s ban on public assemblies. This rationale shows a disregard for media freedom, and sets a dangerous precedent for reporters doing their jobs in the field.

The new edict, as wielded by Prayut, proves to be an outright suspension of many rights protected by the Constitution. It reveals Prayut’s attempt to set the clock backwards and return Thailand to the dark period following his coup in May 2014, when he reveled in absolute authority that did not answer to any civilian institution.

If left unchecked, his ambitions will mean a collapse of any semblance of democratic rule and constitutional protection of basic freedoms Thailand has gained since the 2019 election.

Gen. Prayut has lost any legitimacy he might have left. He has to go, and he has to go now.

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Prayut Refuses To Resign, Police Crack Down on Protesters

Pro democracy demonstrators face water canons as police try to disperse them from their protest venue in Bangkok, Thailand, Friday, Oct. 16, 2020. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)

BANGKOK (AP) — Thailand’s prime minister rejected calls for his resignation Friday, while riot police cracked down on thousands of student-led protesters who rallied in the capital in defiance of a strict state of emergency.

Police used water cannons and charged at the crowd, scattering protesters, onlookers and reporters. Journalists who were hit by the water said it caused a stinging sensation and was dyed blue, to mark protesters for possible later arrest.

Police appeared to have assumed control of the intersection where the rally was centered, and much of the crowd retreated down a street to nearby Chulalongkorn University, where some organizers advised them to shelter if they were not going directly home.

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Pro democracy demonstrators face water canons as police try to disperse them from their protest venue in Bangkok, Thailand, Friday, Oct. 16, 2020. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)

The protesters had gathered in torrential monsoon rains to push their core demands, including that Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha leave office, the constitution be amended and the nation’s monarchy undergo reform.

It was the second day they defied an order not to gather, imposed after some demonstrators heckled a royal motorcade, an unprecedented development in Thailand, where the monarchy is normally held in reverence.

Police had earlier closed roads and put up barricades around a major Bangkok intersection where some 10,000 protesters defied the new decree Thursday. Police in riot gear secured the area, while malls in the normally busy shopping district closed early. Nearby mass transit stations were closed to stop crowds of protesters from getting near the area.

The student protesters, however, simply moved down the street to another large intersection.

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Thai police with riot shields take position in a business district where anti-government protesters sayid they will meet in Bangkok, Thailand, Friday, Oct. 16, 2020. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

Prayuth’s government declared a strict new state of emergency for the capital on Thursday, a day after the heckling of the motorcade.

The state of emergency outlaws public gatherings of more than five people and bans the dissemination of news that is deemed to threaten national security. It also gives authorities broad powers, including detaining people at length without charge.

A number of protest leaders have already been rounded up since the decree went into effect. On Friday another two activists were arrested under a law covering violence against the queen for their alleged part in the heckling of the motorcade. They could face up to life in prison if convicted.

The protest movement was launched in March by university students and its original core demands were new elections, changes in the constitution to make it more democratic, and an end to intimidation of activists.

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Pro democracy demonstrators face water canons as police try to disperse them from their protest venue in Bangkok, Thailand, Friday, Oct. 16, 2020. (AP Photo/Gemunu Amarasinghe)

The protesters charge that Prayuth, who as army commander led a 2014 coup that toppled an elected government, was returned to power unfairly in last year’s general election because laws had been changed to favor a pro-military party.

But the movement took a stunning turn in August, when students at a rally aired unprecedented criticism of the monarchy and issued calls for its reform. Using direct language normally expressed in whispers if at all, the speakers criticized the king’s wealth, his influence and that he spends much of his time outside the country.

Thailand’s royal family has long been considered sacrosanct and a pillar of Thai identity. King Maha Vajiralongkorn and other key member of the royal family are protected by a lese majeste law that has regularly been used to silence critics who risk up to 15 years in prison if deemed to have insulted the institution.

Conservative royalist Thais accuse the protest movement of seeking to end the monarchy, an allegation its leaders deny.

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A pro-democracy demonstrators raises a three-finger salute, a symbol of resistance, as hundreds gather in a business district in Bangkok, Thailand, Friday, Oct. 16, 2020. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)

Wednesday’s incident with the royal motorcade was stunned many Thais. Video that circulated widely showed members of a small crowd heckling a motorcade carrying Queen Suthida and Prince Dipangkorn as it slowly passed. Security personnel stood between the vehicles and the crowd and there was no visible violence and none was described by witnesses.

It normal in Thailand for those waiting for a royal motorcade to sit on the ground or prostrate themselves.

Prayuth’s declaration of a state of emergency said the measure was necessary because “certain groups of perpetrators intended to instigate an untoward incident and movement in the Bangkok area by way of various methods and via different channels, including causing obstruction to the royal motorcade.”

Prayuth said Friday that he had no plans to resign as he had done nothing wrong. He said his government hopes it can drop the state of emergency ahead of its normal 30-day duration “if the situation improves quickly.”

The legal aid group Thai Lawyers for Human Rights said at least 51 people have been arrested since Tuesday in connection with the protests.

Police on Friday went to search the offices of the Progressive Movement, a group formed by former lawmakers from a reform-minded political party that was controversially dissolved by the Constitutional Court.

The two activists charged over the incident with the queen are Ekachai Hongkangwan and Paothong Bunkueanum.

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A vehicle with members of the Thai royal family onboard passes through a road where anti-government protesters gathered outside the Government House on Wednesday, Oct. 14, 2020 in Bangkok, Thailand. (AP Photo)

Ekachai is a veteran activist who has been physically attacked several times, in apparent response to his criticism of the military. Paothong, a university student, has been involved in organizing the protests.

The Wednesday incident in which the two were allegedly involved was stunning to most Thais, because by tradition and law, members of the royal family are treated with the utmost respect.

“We were not notified by the police of the upcoming royal motorcade in which we had no way of knowing because they were not informing us,” Paothong told reporters Friday.

“Once we knew that there was a motorcade of the queen and the heir presumptive to the throne I tried to break away from the line and use my megaphone to have everyone move away from the police barriers so the motorcade can pass through easily,” he said.

The Ministry of Digital Economy, meanwhile, announced it would file complaints with police covering five Twitter accounts and five Facebook accounts inviting people to attend Friday’s rally. Such posting could be deemed illegal under the state of emergency, as well as other laws.

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Students, Monk Teargassed by Police in Crackdown

Scenes from the Pathum Wan Intersection, where police sprayed water cannons and tear gas at protesters on Oct. 16, 2020.

BANGKOK — Demonstrators, some underaged, were left injured from the teargas chemical laced inside water cannons used by riot police in their crackdown on an unarmed protest on Rama I Road. 

“We will retreat. As leaders we weighed the situation,”  a young protester shouted instructions via megaphone. “Many people have been injured. We don’t want there to be any losses. We are retreating and will fight with our brains instead.”

Two young men who were picking up a friend in the protest site said that they heard police say rubber bullets would be used if they do not leave.

“People are going to Chulalongkorn University as a refuge spot,” he said. “But we are going home and will be back tomorrow.”

Read: Siam Showdown: Police Attack Pro-Democracy Protesters

At Chulalongkorn University, protesters are regrouping in the belief that police may not arrest people inside the campus. 

“You can come in! Come in!” said a female protester, beckoning people inside.

A lecturer from the medical faculty said that they would not let police inside. 

“I walked since the Victory Monument. I can’t go home since the BTS is closed,” a young man said. “I’m here to wash my eyes.”

LIVE from Pathumwan Intersection

LIVE: Riot police are clearing protesters from Pathumwan Intersection. Demonstrators are regrouping at Chulalongkorn University.

โพสต์โดย Khaosod English เมื่อ วันศุกร์ที่ 16 ตุลาคม 2020

Twitter user @qqsbpp reports that a five-year-old was injured from the tear gas. 

Demonstrators also include underage students.

https://twitter.com/mewwithgulf/status/1317085204725391360

While the water was being sprayed at the protesters, a monk knocked on the door of the water cannon truck to ask him to stop. 

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Siam Showdown: Police Attack Pro-Democracy Protesters

Riot police move on pro-democracy protesters in front of Siam Paragon shopping mall on Oct. 16, 2020.

BANGKOK  — At least four hundred strong anti-riot police shot water cannons and charged at pro-democracy student protesters, who are armed only with umbrellas. 

“With love and care, young brothers and sisters. Your parents love you. They want you home. Do not make them worry,” a police loudspeaker said before lines of riot police descended on the protesters outside Siam Paragon shopping mall.

Police announced that protesters were breaking the emergency decree imposed by PM Prayut Chan-ocha. 

Demonstrators stood behind a makeshift barrier as police moved on them. They held up three fingers and shouted at the police to leave. One protester strapped himself to the front of the barriers. Protesters also locked their umbrellas in preparation of the water cannons, a tactic apparently imported from protesters in Hong Kong. 

“Get out, get out,” the protesters chanted, before sitting down. The protesters also sang the national anthem in defiance.

The water appears to be laced with chemicals, our reporters at the scene said. 

This is a developing story.

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‘Hold Fast to Our Ideals:’ Detained Activists Write from Prison

Panusaya “Rung” Sithijirawattanakul arrested Oct.15, 2020. Right, Panusaya’s letter.

BANGKOK — Key pro-democracy activists who had been arrested for their protests earlier this week wrote open letters on Friday to the public from their captivity. 

Arnon Nampha, Parit “Penguin” Chiwarak, Panusaya “Rung” Sithijirawattanakul, and Prasiddhi Grudharochana wrote in either social media posts or letters delivered by their lawyers on Thursday, hours after they were arrested for violating the state of emergency. 

Arnon is detained at Wing 41 Royal Air Force. The activist said he can use his phone but cannot see an attorney. 

He posted Thursday: “I will sleep in Chiang Mai jail, but I won’t be offered bail (you guys know why). I’m not angry at the process of justice that has happened to me, but I will record it in an account book made of dog leather.”

In Buddhist beliefs about the underworld, a ruling court writes down bad deeds in a book bound with dogskin. 

Parit, Panusaya, and activist Prasiddhi Grudharochanawho are held at Thanyaburi District Prison. They wrote letters to the outside world via their lawyers, who shared them on social media

Parit called for protesters to keep protesting every day, in Bangkok as well as upcountry. 

“Everyone is a leader,” he wrote. “This is the turning point. If we hold fast to our ideals, even hundreds and thousands of dictators will fall with the power of the citizens.” 

Prasiddhi, who had been arrested at the same time as the others, wrote: “if you’re reading this letter, this means I might not come out again. But no matter. We’re fine, don’t worry. This place can hold prison only our bodies, but cannot jail our ideals of democracy that fly through the roof here.” 

Prasiddhi urged supporters to come to the protests and to close their accounts with the Siam Commercial Bank. 

Panusaya “Rung” Sithijirawattanakul was arrested at a hotel room on Thursday morning after police dispersed the crowd in front of Government House. 

“If I never return to you guys, please don’t be discouraged. I’m ready to sacrifice for our fight,” Panusaya wrote in her letter. “People might see that leaders are disappearing one by one, but actually, we are always with you in the form of ideals.” 

“I leave my hope and fight with you. May everyone use all of your bravery to lead our friends. We’ve come so far; the finish line is not far off,” Panusaya went on. “Fight for our human dignity. No one is born with blue blood. No one is born higher than others. We are all equal humans.”

A video of police arresting Panusaya at the hotel shows Rung telling the policeman his job was to “protect the people.”

He replied, “I’m still a government employee. …My heart is with you, but I have to retire first.”

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‘Everyone Can Die Any Moment,’ Outrage at Prayut’s Protest Remark

PM Prayut Chan-o-cha speaks at Government House on Oct. 16, 2020.

BANGKOK — PM Prayut Chan-o-cha on Friday responded to the protests that challenged his authority in an unprecedented scale by insisting he would not resign, before going on a rant that included what many saw as a threat to the protesters.

“Let me ask you what I did wrong? What did I do wrong right now? Can I ask you?” Prime Minister Prayut said to reporters in the first news conference since he declared a “severe emergency” over Bangkok. 

When a reporter suggested it was because Prayut has been a Prime Minister for too long, the general replied, “Have you listened to monks’ prayer? Have you visited a temple at all? I guess you don’t often visit a temple, that’s why you are like this.” 

“Listen to the prayers … don’t be careless, because people can die today, or tomorrow,” Prayut said, hours before a new protest is planned in Bangkok’s city center. “As the prayers go, don’t be reckless with your life. Prepare to die any moment, by illness or whatever.”

He went on, “Do not trifle with the powerful Grim Reaper. Death may come today, or another day. Everyone can die at any moment.” 

The last sentence seems to be a reference to Lord Buddha’s word as inscribed in the book of Bhaddhēkarattagāthā, in which he warned his followers to be aware that death can come at any time.

But his remark was interpreted nonetheless by critics of the government as a warning against the protesters set to gather today. 

“Shouldn’t Thai news medias do something when Junta PM made a Massacre threat to Thai people?” Twitter user @2161LORI wrote in English under the hashtag “PM Threatens to Kill People.” 

“Once the Prime Minister threatens to kill people, he is no longer the Prime Minister, because he has fully become a tyrant,” activist leader Tattep “Ford” Ruangprapaikijseree wrote on social media.

At the news conference, PM Prayut also insisted he would not bow to protesters’ demand of immediate resignation, and that the protesters will face legal consequences.

“If we allow people who break the law to continue breaking the law, the country will not survive,” Prayut said. “This is not for my sake. It’s for the sake of everyone. The country, and the people.”

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Armed With Social Media, Thais Gear up For Friday’s Protest

People hold up mobile phone flashlights at the anti-government protest at Ratchaprasong Intersection on Oct. 15, 2020.

BANGKOK — Netizens opposed to the government are mobilizing for what is expected to be a large protest against PM Prayut Chan-o-cha on Friday afternoon. 

With two activists facing life imprisonment on dubious charges of assaulting the Queen and scores of protest leaders arrested, the largely leaderless pro-democracy camp is planning to descend on Ratchaprasong Intersection 5pm. But their plan might be complicated by a police order to close down the intersection and neighboring streets at 2pm. 

The Metropolitan Police Bureau put the number of protesters on Thursday at 13,500, although the real number is likely much higher, according to journalists on the ground. 

Emboldened and enraged by the arrests – as well as Gen. Prayut’s insistence on Friday that he would not resign, protesters are prepping for the protest and sharing their experiences on Twitter under the hashtag, #16OctAtRatchaprasong

Twitter user @Teletubbiii posted screenshots of her Instagram account @Janaannd who said that she and her friends went around attacking protesters Thursday. 

“Today, I snuck into the trash mob, not to join them, but to hit those fucking kids’ heads. I hurt so many. I’m so proud. They looked around stupidly,” she wrote. “If they’re not bruised, then they’re definitely broken. My friend and I raced to hit them to see how many we could hit. Today they won, but tomorrow it’s a rematch.” 

Female students in their uniforms said they were the subject of sexuallly inappropriate comments. 

https://twitter.com/balaBongworld/status/1316698542652571648

@Balabongworld said that policemen said to her underclassmen, “You look so cute in your uniform. Do you have enough to pay for tuition yet?” 

“While I was walking out from the protest, a police officer said, you can’t pass through here. But if you want to go, can I touch your boobs?” 

https://twitter.com/itstwentyfive_/status/1316694029862461440

“It’s not just police. I heard someone say, ‘those female student uniforms are so hot.’”  

A group of fans of the BTS K-pop group, or Armys, raised more than 135,000 baht to support the protests by transferring money to actress-activist Intira “Sai” Chaorenpura, who in turn routinely organizes kitchens and toilets for the protesters. 

https://twitter.com/Happy_JKTH/status/1316896586362839040
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Police to Shut Down Ratchaprasong Ahead of Protest

Anti-government protest at Ratchaprasong Intersection on Oct. 15, 2020.

BANGKOK — Police announced on Friday morning Ratchaprasong Intersection and several roads in the same vicinity will be sealed off from traffic at 2pm onward, just hours ahead of a new anti-government protest set to take place there at 5pm.

Deputy metropolitan police chief Jirasan Kaewsaeng-ek said Ratchadamri Road will be closed from Ratchadamri to Pratunam intersections, while the Chidlom-Ratchaprasong stretch of Ploenchit Road will be shut down as well, starting 2pm.

It is unclear whether Skytrain services in the area will also be affected by the shutdown order.

The closure appears to be a drastic attempt to block what could turn out to be the largest protest against PM Prayut Chan-o-cha in months. Using social media for coordination, netizens opposed to the government vowed to stage a rally at Ratchaprasong Intersection at 5pm.

A similar impromptu protest on Thursday night drew at least 25,000 people – some believe the number to be higher – and even more people were expected to join the protest on Friday evening.

Bangkok is currently under the Severe State of Emergency imposed by PM Prayut on Thursday, giving the security officers a broad power to ban gatherings, close down areas, search individuals without warrants, and censor any media coverage deemed to cause unrest.

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7 Arrested for Fresh Protest, Cops Threaten to Charge Everyone

Anti-government protest on Ratchaprasong Intersection on Oct. 16, 2020.
Anti-government protest on Ratchaprasong Intersection on Oct. 16, 2020.

BANGKOK — Seven people are said to be under arrest as of Friday for their role in yesterday’s massive anti-government protest at the heart of Bangkok’s shopping district.

The Thai Lawyers for Human Rights group said Friday six crew members handling the sound system for Thursday’s rally on Ratchaprasong Intersection were arrested at around midnight after leaving the protest site. An unidentified demonstrator was also taken away during a scuffle that broke out on Thursday afternoon.

More arrests might be on the way, as police threatened to prosecute “every protester” who joined the gathering that defied the new emergency decree, though their claim was met with much ridicule on social media.

“The rally went against the Severe State of Emergency,” Deputy Bangkok police chief Maj. Gen. Piya Tawichai said at a news conference on Thursday night. “Every protester will be prosecuted and police have already gathered all the evidence.”

Piya did not explain how the police would carry out the arrests.

Police spokesman Kissana Phattanacharoen said police will also press charges against individuals who broke the gates of the elevated walkway over the intersection, which was cordoned off by police for hours before demonstrators forced their way in.

“Is this a peaceful protest?” Col. Kissana said. “I urge citizens to think about it carefully since they can’t undo their criminal records.”

The seven suspects are being detained at the regional Border Patrol Police headquarters in Pathum Thani’s Khlong Luang district, where several protest leaders who were arrested in the early hours of Thursday are also being held, the Thai Lawyers for Human Rights said.

Tens of thousands filled the streets around the Ratchaprasong Intersection in central Bangkok throughout Thursday evening in defiance of the “Severe State of Emergency” imposed by PM Prayut Chan-o-cha in an attempt to quell the rising dissent against his regime.

The decree banned political gatherings of more than five people, allowed security officers to shut down buildings and search individuals without warrants, and empowered censorship of the media.

The rally was an impromptu response to police’s crackdown on protesters camping outside Government House in the early morning hours of Thursday. At least 25,000 people are believed to have attended the Ratchaprasong protest, which proceeded largely without leaders.

Apart from a brief confrontation with riot police when the protesters began to spill into the streets, the rally went generally peaceful. They dispersed at around 10pm and pledged to return at the same venue on Friday 5pm.

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