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Anti-Yingluck protester shot dead amid clash after election disrupted

A leader of anti-government protests is shot dead amid confrontation in Bangkok after early voting ahead of next week's poll is disrupted

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A voter is throttled as he tries to enter a polling station. Photo: EPA

Anti-government demonstrators swarmed dozens of polling stations in Thailand yesterday to stop advance voting for next Sunday's elections, chaining gates shut, threatening voters and preventing hundreds of thousands of people from casting ballots.

A protest faction leader was fatally shot in a confrontation near a polling centre that also left 11 people wounded, and isolated street brawls broke out in several parts of Bangkok.

Suthin Tharathin, a leader of the Dharma Army, a Buddhist organisation that has been prominent in a recent wave of anti-government demonstrations, was gunned down while he gave a speech from the back of a pick-up truck in a suburb of the Thai capital.

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Protest spokesman Akanat Promphan accused a "pro-government mob" of carrying out the attack.

The pick-up on which a protest leader was fatally shot. Photo: EPA
The pick-up on which a protest leader was fatally shot. Photo: EPA
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Suthin was the 10th person to be killed during nearly three months of rallies that have stoked international concern and investor fears.

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