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Thai PM Calls Elections as 100,000 Join Protests

Thai PM Calls Elections as 100,000 Join Protests
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Thailand's premier called a snap election Monday to try to defuse the kingdom's political crisis but protesters kept up their fight to topple her government with an estimated 100,000 demonstrators flooding the streets of Bangkok.

Thai PM Calls Elections as 100,000 Join ProtestsPrime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra has faced more than a month of sometimes-violent street protests by demonstrators who want to suspend the country's democracy in favor of an unelected "People's Council."
Thai opposition lawmakers resigned en masse from parliament Sunday, deepening the political deadlock.

Yingluck, the sister of ousted leader Thaksin Shinawatra, announced in a televised national address Monday that she would dissolve parliament and hold a general election "as soon as possible."
"The government does not want any loss of life," she said, amid fears that the mass rallies could bring fresh violence.
The election move could increase pressure on protesters to agree to some kind of compromise with the government.

But the leaders of the anti-government movement said that they were not satisfied with new elections, pledging to rid Thailand of the influence of Thaksin, a tycoon-turned-premier who was ousted by royalist generals in a coup seven years ago and now lives abroad.
"The movement will keep on fighting. Our goal is to uproot the Thaksin regime. Although the House is dissolved and there will be new elections, the Thaksin regime is still in place," protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban said.
"My people want more than dissolution. They are determined to regain their sovereignty," he said.

The opposition Democrat Party - which said Sunday its 153 MPs were resigning from the 500-seat lower house because they could not achieve anything in parliament - has not won an elected majority in about two decades.
Around 100,000 people were estimated to have joined the protests by mid-morning, according to the government's Center for the Administration of Peace and Order, which was set up to deal with the unrest.

Demonstrators marched along several routes through the capital towards the government headquarters -the main target of the rally -paralyzing traffic in parts of the city.
Tensions remain high in the kingdom after several days of street clashes last week when police used tear gas, water cannon and rubber bullets against rock-throwing demonstrators.
The unrest has left five people dead and more than 200 injured. The authorities have said they would try to avoid fresh confrontation.

The demonstrations were triggered by an amnesty bill, since dropped by Yingluck's ruling party, which opponents feared would have cleared the way for Thaksin's return.
They are the biggest and deadliest street demonstrations since 2010, when dozens of people were killed in a military crackdown on mass pro-Thaksin Red Shirt rallies in Bangkok.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

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