Update | Thai red shirt government supporters gather to 'defend democracy' after toppling of PM
Pro-Shinawatra red shirt demonstrators took to the street on Saturday to counter weeks of protests by anti-government yellow shirts

Thousands of pro-government "red shirts" massed in Thailand's capital yesterday to challenge attempts by opposition protesters to hand power to an unelected regime, warning that the kingdom was lurching towards "civil war".
The dismissal of prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra and nine ministers by the Constitutional Court last week for the improper transfer of a top security official has plunged the restive kingdom deeper into crisis.
Officials said about 3,000 police officers were on standby for the pro-government rally on the western outskirts of Bangkok, with turnout expected to peak in the evening.
Holding aloft portraits of Yingluck, the red-clad movement said it would keep up the protest for as long as it deemed necessary to defend the wounded administration.
"The red-shirts cannot accept the undemocratic and unconstitutional appointment of a prime minister," said chairman Jatuporn Prompan, denouncing a call by the opposition for judges, the Senate president and other prominent figures to choose a new prime minister.
"It would be the beginning of a disaster for the country that will lead to civil war," he said.