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Thai police fire tear gas in clash with hundreds of protesters

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A anti-government Pitak Siam wave Thai national flag in front of Thai riot polices at Makkawan bridge near the Government House in Bangkok on Thailand. Photo: EPA

Thai police fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of anti-government protesters who pushed through barriers and clashed with security forces on Saturday as thousands gathered seeking to overthrow Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra’s government.

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The royalist Pitak Siam group, led by retired military general Boonlert Kaewprasit, accuses Yingluck’s government of corruption and being a puppet of former premier Thaksin Shinawatra, Yingluck’s brother.

It has attracted the support of yellow-shirted members of the People’s Alliance for Democracy who helped destabilize and topple governments led or backed by Thaksin in 2006 and 2008.

Thaksin remains a deeply divisive figure in Thailand. He was ousted in a 2006 military-backed coup and fled the country in 2008 shortly before being found guilty of abuse of power.

“If I can’t overthrow this government, I am prepared to die,” Boonlert told supporters in Thai. In English, he said: “The world will see this corrupted and cruel government. The world can see the government under a puppet.”

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At least seven police were wounded and up to 132 protesters arrested in a clash near the U.N. Asia-Pacific headquarters, a stone’s throw away from the main rally site.

Authorities have deployed 17,000 police at the rally site and the government has invoked the Internal Security Act allowing police to detain protesters and carry out security checks and set up roadblocks.

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