Thai PM rejects protestors' demands

Thailand’s prime minister has rejected the demands of anti-government protesters locked in street battles with police, saying what they want is unacceptable under the constitution.

Thai PM rejects protestors' demands

Thailand’s prime minister has rejected the demands of anti-government protesters locked in street battles with police, saying what they want is unacceptable under the constitution.

In a televised news conference, prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra said she is willing to “open every door” for negotiations to find a peaceful resolution to Thailand’s biggest political crisis in years.

But protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban, who met with Ms Yingluck on Sunday night, has said he will not be satisfied with her resignation or new elections. Instead, he wants an unelected “people’s council” to pick a new prime minister.

“I don’t know how we can proceed” with that, she said. “We don’t know how to make it happen. Right now we don’t see any way to resolve the problem under the constitution,” she said in the brief 12-minute news conference.

“If there is any way I can restore peace I am willing to do it. The government does not have to hold on to power, we only want peace.”

The protests have renewed fears of prolonged instability in one of South East Asia’s biggest economies and come just ahead of the peak holiday tourist season.

After a weekend of chaos in pockets of Bangkok, protesters regrouped outside the heavily barricaded prime minister’s office compound on Monday and repeatedly clashed with police who fired tear gas, water cannon and rubber bullets.

Emboldened by their leader’s vow to topple Ms Yingluck by Wednesday, they threw rocks at police and tore away sections of barbed wire and concrete barriers. At least three people were killed and 103 injured in skirmishes over the weekend.

The protesters, who are mostly middle-class Bangkok supporters of the opposition Democrat Party, want to get rid of Ms Yingluck, claiming she is a proxy for her brother, former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra. He was deposed in a 2006 military coup but remains central to Thailand’s political crisis, and is a focal point for the protesters’ hatred.

The protesters, who call themselves the People’s Democratic Reform Committee, say their goal is to uproot the political machine of Mr Thaksin, who is accused of widespread corruption and abuse of power.

Monday’s violence took place around major institutions – the Government House, the Parliament and Metropolitan Police Headquarters in the historic quarter of the capital. The area has some of Bangkok’s main tourist attractions such as the Grand Palace, Wat Pho temple, the Bangkok zoo, and the backpacker area of Khao San Road. Most of Bangkok, a city of 10 million, has been unaffected.

Many of the protesters wore raincoats and plastic bags over their heads to protect against the sting of tear gas.

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