söndag 18 juli 2021

Police in Bangkok on Sunday fired water cannon, rubber bullets and tear gas at protesters demanding that Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha step down and the government be held accountable for its gross mismanagement of the Covid-19 pandemic. Bangkok Post

Police fire water cannon, rubber bullets, tear gas at protesters
Anti-government protesters clash with police on Ratchadamnoen Avenue on Sunday as their march to Government House was blocked. (Photo: Arnun Chonmahatrakool)
Anti-government protesters clash with police on Ratchadamnoen Avenue on Sunday as their march to Government House was blocked. (Photo: Arnun Chonmahatrakool)

Police in Bangkok on Sunday fired water cannon, rubber bullets and tear gas at protesters demanding that Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha step down and the government be held accountable for its gross mismanagement of the Covid-19 pandemic.

The demonstrators clashed with police blocking Ratchadamoneon Nok Avenue in a bid to prevent them from marching to Government House, forcing the protesters to abandon the originally planned route on Ratchadamnoen Nok and switch to Nakhon Sawan Road.

An area near Wat Ratchanadda near Democracy Monument was set up for health volunteers to help protesters injured during the police onslaught. 

A number of people were injured.

Earlier, cars and motorcycles joined a throng of demonstrators walking from Democracy Monument to Government House. Led by the Free Youth movement and its allies, the anti-government protesters were defying a ban on public gatherings by assembling at the monument on Ratchadamnoen Avenue where thousands attended a rally exactly one year ago.

Demonstrations began early last year by calling for the ouster of the former junta leader and the restoration of democracy, but have recently added the government's mismanagement of the coronavirus pandemic to their agendas.

Several mock body bags were brought to the site, symbolising the government's failure to curb the spread of the virus that has led to 3,341 deaths since the outbreak began early last year.

A mock body bag on a car is pictured at the rally site at Democracy Monument. (Reuters photo)

Car drivers and motorcyclists honked their horns as the organisers kicked off their march from the monument to the office of the prime minister.

The rally came in spite of the government's ban on assemblies of more than five people in Greater Bangkok in what it said was a bid to prevent further spread of the virus. The lockdown in 10 provinces, including the capital, has been extended to Aug 2, while another three provinces will come under the same restrictions on Tuesday.

More than 2,000 police were deployed to counter the rally.

Pol Maj Gen Piya Tawichai, the deputy commander of the Metropolitan Police Bureau, said a number of effigies of the prime minister had been seized at the monument to prevent the protesters from setting them on fire outside Government House. 

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