washingtonpost.com
Blast in Bangkok Kills 1, Injures 23
Anti-Government Protest Site Hit In Morning Attack

By Tim Johnston
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, November 21, 2008

BANGKOK, Nov. 20 -- An explosion at an anti-government protest site in central Bangkok early Thursday killed one person and wounded 23 others, prompting a leader of the demonstration to call for a mass rally against the government on Sunday.

Police said they think the blast was caused by a grenade. It exploded about 3:30 a.m. at Government House, the prime minister's office complex, which demonstrators have occupied since late August. The explosive landed on the canvas of a large marquee, showering those who were sleeping below with shrapnel.

"It landed on the roof; otherwise many more people would have been injured," said Kamron Trongma, who was nearby when the explosion happened.

Police told news services that a 48-year-old man sustained shrapnel wounds to the chest and neck area and was killed. Some of the others who were injured were taken to hospitals.

The demonstrators, led by the People's Alliance for Democracy, have vowed to bring down the government, which they accuse of being a proxy for controversial former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra. The current prime minister, Somchai Wongsawat, is Thaksin's brother-in-law.

The dispute between the predominantly urban, middle-class demonstrators and the government, which was voted into power last year with the backing of millions of Thailand's rural poor, has paralyzed the country's political process and gouged deep political divisions between the rural and urban populations.

The demonstrators have ruled out any compromise, vowing to maintain their protest until the government is forced out of office.

After the attack, media magnate Sondhi Limthongkul, the protesters' most influential leader, called on supporters to gather Sunday for a major rally against the "killer government."

He accused the police of cooperating with whomever attacked the protesters Thursday.

"Without police cooperation, they could not have access to such weapons," he said.

Thursday's death is the fourth associated with the current protests. In early September, a government supporter was killed in a clash with demonstrators. Last month, a protester died after she was hit by a tear gas grenade that police fired when trying to clear demonstrators around the nearby parliament building. On the same day, another protester was killed in an explosion in a car.

Thaksin, who became a billionaire in the telecommunications industry, has fled Thailand, where he faces a jail sentence after being convicted in October on charges of breaching conflict-of-interest laws. His whereabouts are not known, because he left his home in Britain recently after his visa there was revoked.

View all comments that have been posted about this article.

© 2008 The Washington Post Company