Protesters clash with police at anti-PM rally in Bangkok

Anti-government demonstrators burn mock body bags, representing casualties of the coronavirus outbreak, and a puppet depicting Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha in Bangkok.
Anti-government demonstrators burn mock body bags, representing casualties of the coronavirus outbreak, and a puppet depicting Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha in Bangkok.
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Al Jazeera :
Three protesters are injured when Thai police fired tear gas and rubber bullets at a Bangkok rally, as coronavirus cases soar and anger builds about Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha’s handling of the pandemic.
For the third day in a week, protesters and police clashed on Friday, while the kingdom grappled with its worst virus outbreak so far and registered a new daily high of 23,418 infections.
Cases were slightly lower on Saturday at more than 22,000 and 217 new deaths, bringing the country’s total since the pandemic to more than 900,000, with more than 7,300 deaths.
On Saturday, Bangkok Post reported that Thanpuying Boonruen Choonhavan, the widow of former Prime Minister Chatichai Choonhavan died of COVID-19 at the age of 101.
The sluggish rollout of Thailand’s vaccination programme and financial pain from restrictions is heaping political pressure on the prime minister.
Protesters gathered in Bangkok at a major intersection by Victory Monument, defying a ban on public gatherings, and set fire to sacks of rotting fruit to symbolise the economic hardship of farmers.
 “These fruits can’t be sold because of government failure [to manage the virus and the economy],” a female protester told a crowd of several hundred people.
Demonstrators attempted to march on Prayut’s residence inside a military barracks holding a large banner that read, “Prayuth must get out immediately.”
Police used barbed wire and rows of shipping containers to block their path while officers fired tear gas, rubber bullets and water cannon.
Deputy National Police spokesman Kissana Phathanacharoen said protesters targeted officers with ping pong bombs, slingshots, bricks, and firecrackers.
Fourteen motorbikes were impounded, he said.
At least three protesters were injured including youth activist Thanat “Nat” Thanakitamnuay, an emergency medical centre said.
At protests on Tuesday and Wednesday in the same area, police used water cannon, tear gas and rubber bullets, and some demonstrators threw firecrackers at officers.
Bangkok police, facing accusations of heavy-handedness, have insisted their approach is in line with the law and urged people not to jeopardise public health and safety.
“There is clear evidence that some people among the protest group have contracted COVID-19,” Metropolitan Police Bureau chief Phukphong Phongpetra told reporters on Friday.
A young protester who blew his own hand off while throwing a firework during Wednesday’s rally has tested positive for coronavirus, local media reported.
Last year, a youth-led pro-democracy protest movement began in Thailand that, at its peak, drew tens of thousands of people to rallies demanding the resignation of Prayut, the former army chief who came to power in a 2014 coup.
But the movement lost momentum earlier this year as COVID-19 cases surged and its leaders were detained.

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