Thousands of Thai protesters have massed outside four ministries, a
major government office complex and more than a dozen provincial halls
in an escalation of their efforts to oust Prime Minister Yingluck
Shinawatra.
The Department of Special Investigation [DSI] was evacuated on
Wednesday as about 2,000 protesters gathered outside, rallying against
the prime minister and her influential brother, former premier Thaksin
Shinawatra.
Hundreds of demonstrators also gathered in front of the ministries
of labour, energy, health and commerce in Bangkok, along with local
government offices in 19 provinces, according to a senior Interior
Ministry official.
"We are very upbeat and I think we will win in a few days," protest
leader and former deputy prime minister Suthep Thaugsuban told
reporters, calling for the creation of an unelected administration to
run the country.
"If we demolish the Thaksin regime... we will set up a people's
council, which will come from people from every sector," he said. "Then
we will let the people's council pick good people to be the prime
minister and ministers."
Anti-government protesters chanted abuse at the DSI as scores of
riot police scrambled to put on helmets and hold up shields, with
crowds pushing against a low fence.
The DSI, located in a complex of key government offices, recently
indicted Thaugsuban for his alleged role in the deaths of more than 90
people in a 2010 military crackdown targeting supporters of Thaksin
Shinawatra.
Interest rate slashed
Thousands of demonstrators, angry at the continuing influence of
Thaksin Shinawatra on his sister's government, have forced the closure
of several ministries in the past two days, and they show no signs of
letting up.
About 3,000 protesters gathered on Wednesday at the Energy Ministry,
700 at the Commerce Ministry and 200 at the Industry Ministry, police
said.
Interior Ministry Permanent Secretary Wiboon Sagnuanpong said all ministries were still operating.
As the turmoil swelled, Thailand's central bank unexpectedly cut
interest rates Wednesday by 25 basis points, a move that extended the
baht's loss by 0.3 percent to 32.08 against the dollar.
The bank also slashed the 2013 economic growth forecast to 3
percent, saying the political tension was affecting investor confidence.
Embattled Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, who faces a
no-confidence vote later this week, maintained that police would use
their emergency powers to keep the peace.
"My government will not use force. This is not the 'Thaksin regime';
this is a democratically elected government," she told reporters.
Thaksin Shinawatra, a billionaire tycoon-turned-politician, is
adored by many of the country's rural and urban working-class citizens,
but reviled by many in the elite and middle classes, who accuse him of
being corrupt and a threat to the monarchy
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