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Oct 07 2008
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By Agencies   

Several protesters were seriously injured in Tuesday's clashes with riot police [EPA]
Several protesters were seriously injured in Tuesday's clashes with riot police [EPA]
Thailand has deployed soldiers in the capital Bangkok to quell anti-government protests that left at least 278 people injured, some of them seriously, officials say.

Earlier on Tuesday, the country's deputy prime minister, Chavalit Yongchaiyudh, resigned, saying he bore responsibility for the violence.

"Since this action did not achieve what I planned, I want to show my responsibility for this operation," he wrote in his resignation letter.

Chavalit's dramatic departure on Tuesday followed a morning of clashes between anti-government demonstrators and riot police on the streets surrounding the parliament building in Bangkok.

A suspected car bomb also killed one person outside the parliament amid reports of shots being fired. Witnesses said a protester had opened fire at the police.

Earlier thousands of protesters had tried to block Somchai Wongsawat, Thailand's new prime minister, from delivering his first policy speech to members of parliament by blocking the roads with barbed wire and car tyres.

Police action

Tuesday's troubles began with riot police moving in to clear the barricades, firing tear gas into the crowd.

At least 69 people were injured, including two men who had part of their legs blown off by exploding gas canisters.

Protesters say the government is too close to former PM Thaksin [AFP]
Protesters say the government is too close to former PM Thaksin [AFP]

Somchai eventually opened the parliamentary session after a 90-minute delay, despite continuing clashes outside the building.

His speech was boycotted by the opposition Democracy Party.

After the first clashes, protesters regrouped to barricade all four entrances to the parliament building, saying they wanted to block top officials from leaving.

Dogged protesters

Several of the protesters said the clashes made them even more determined to fight on to remove Somchai's government.

Some reports cited witnesses outside the parliament saying they heard gunfire when police moved to clear a path through the barricades, but police officials insisted that only tear gas was used and denied using "disproportionate force".

"We did not use any weapon other than tear gas and shields to clear the path for parliamentarians to go into the building," Deputy Major-General Umnuey Nimmanno, the Bangkok police chief, said.

"It is conventional practice in dispersing a crowd.''

Protesters had set up tyre and barbed-wire barricades to block access to parliament [EPA]
Protesters had set up tyre and barbed-wire barricades to block access to parliament [EPA]

Tuesday's clashes follow months of mounting political tensions in Thailand which began in late May when demonstrators from the People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) - a coalition of businessmen, academics and activists - launched their campaign to overthrow Thailand's elected government.

In early August PAD supporters moved to occupy the grounds of Government House, the prime minister's offices in the centre of Bangkok close to the parliament building.

Their original aim had been to oust the then prime minister, Samak Sundaravej, whom they accused of being a puppet of Thaksin Shinawatra, Thailand's former leader who was removed in a 2006 military coup.

They have since vowed to oppose Somchai as Samak's replacement.

Somchai is Thaksin's brother-in-law.

Following Tuesday's clashes Colonel Sansern Kaewkamnerd, a spokesman for the Thai armed forces, said the military was "concerned" about the violence against unarmed protesters and said any serious injuries should be investigated.

He dismissed speculation of a military intervention to end the unrest in Thailand.

Thailand's military have staged 18 coups since the country became a constitutional monarchy in 1932.

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