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Thai protesters rally ahead of parliamentary debate

The rallies were called on Saturday night after PM Prayuth Chan-ocha ignored the protesters’ deadline to step down

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Bangkok, October 25

Pro-democracy protesters in Thailand gathered again on Sunday in Bangkok seeking to keep up pressure on the government a day ahead of a special session of Parliament called to try to ease political tensions.

The rally took place at the busy Rajprasong intersection, in the heart of the capital’s shopping district, an area that usually draws large weekend crowds. A few protesters turned out in the first hour of the rally as a better publicised protest had already been called for Monday.

The rallies were called Saturday night after Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha ignored the protesters’ deadline to step down.

The protesters’ core demands also include a more democratic constitution and reforms to the monarchy. Public criticism of the monarchy is unprecedented is a country where the royal institution has been considered sacrosanct.

The protesters charge that Prayuth, who led a coup in 2014 as the Army Chief, was returned to power unfairly in last year’s general election because laws had been changed to favour a pro-military party. The protesters also say that the constitution, written and enacted under military rule, is undemocratic.

Prayuth’s government last week called the Parliamentary session, expected to last two days, to seek to defuse weeks of almost daily protests.

“The only way to a lasting solution for all sides that is fair for those on the streets as well as for the many millions who choose not to go on the streets is to discuss and resolve these differences through the parliamentary process,” he said last week.

Prayuth also lifted a state of emergency that he had imposed a week earlier that made the protest rallies illegal.

The protesters were not impressed by his efforts to appease them, declaring them insincere.

They noted on social media that the points of discussion submitted by the government for debate dealt not with their concerns but were thinly disguised criticisms of the protests themselves. AP

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