HomeEmailContact UsEast Africa Business
Tanzania News - The Citizen
Home News International News Thai ex-PM grilled over deadly rally
Thai ex-PM grilled over deadly rally  Send to a friend
Saturday, 10 December 2011 09:47

Bangkok,Friday.Former Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva was questioned by police on Friday over a deadly military crackdown on mass opposition protests in Bangkok last year while he was in office.Abhisit, now opposition leader, smiled but made no comment to reporters as he arrived at the Bangkok Metropolitan Police headquarters, where he was summoned as a witness.

About a dozen protesters gathered outside with signs that read "Murderer" and "Whoever gave the kill order must face karma".More than 90 people, mostly civilians, were killed and nearly 1,900 were wounded during the April and May 2010 rallies, which drew about 100,000 "Red Shirt" demonstrators at their peak.

On Thursday Abhisit's former deputy Suthep Thaugsuban, who was in charge of national security at the time of the demonstrations, was grilled by police. It is the first time that top members of the previous government have been summoned for questioning over their handling of the protests, which ended when soldiers firing live rounds stormed the fortified rally site.

Thailand now has a new government allied to the Red Shirts' hero, fugitive former leader Thaksin Shinawatra, whose sister Yingluck is prime minister and has raised the idea of an amnesty for politicians including her brother.Her deputy Chalerm Yubamrung last month said that Thai authorities had clear evidence that government troops were responsible for the death of a Japanese cameraman, one of two foreign journalists killed during last year's crackdown.

Abhisit's government invoked emergency rule to deal with the unrest, giving broad powers to the military, which deployed thousands of troops in the capital. A leading human rights watchdog in May accused Thai soldiers of "cold-blooded acts of murder" during the political violence.

New York-based Human Rights Watch said the army used snipers and crushed civil disobedience with disproportionate force during the Red Shirt rallies.Troops fired "repeatedly and indiscriminately" into the Wat Pathum Wanaram temple, a supposedly safe zone where several people were killed, from a vantage point on the tracks of the capital's elevated train network, it said. (AFP)


Add this page to your favorite Social Bookmarking websites
Reddit! Del.icio.us! Mixx! Free and Open Source Software News Google! Live! Facebook! StumbleUpon! TwitThis Joomla Free PHP
 

Add comment


Security code
Refresh

Banner
Banner