The six-year-old sister of a boy killed in a bomb blast
in the Thai capital died on Monday, doctors said, taking the death toll
to three from the latest incident in a conflict that has burst into
episodic violence and shows no sign of ending.
The bomb exploded in a busy shopping district on Sunday, wounding at
least 22 people near an anti-government protest site. Supporters of
Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra earlier promised to get tough
with the protesters who took to the streets last November in their bid
to oust her.
The young girl's four-year-old brother and a 59-year-old woman were
also killed in the blast. Medical sources had earlier put the age of the
boy at 12 and the woman at 40.
A nine-year-old boy was in intensive care in hospital with severe head injuries.
It was not immediately clear who was responsible for the attack but
the polarisation of Thai society raises the possibility of wider civil
strife.
The protests pit the mainly middle-class anti-government
demonstrators from Bangkok and the south against supporters of Yingluck
from the populous rural north and northeast.
Both sides have blamed the other for instigating violence, while
armed provocateurs have a history of trying to stir tension. Protesters
and the police have also blamed violence on shadowy third parties.
Yingluck said Sunday's attack, and one on Saturday in the eastern
province of Trat in which a five-year-old girl was killed, were
terrorism.
"I strongly condemn the use of violence in recent days ... since the lives of children were lost," she said on Facebook.
"The violent incidents are terrorist acts for political gains without regard for human life."
Leaders of the pro-government United Front for Democracy against
Dictatorship (UDD) vowed on Sunday to "deal with" anti-government leader
Suthep Thaugsuban, setting the scene for possible confrontation.
"This fight will be harder than any other ... You must think how we
can deal with Suthep and those supporting him," Jatuporn Prompan, a UDD
leader and senior member of the ruling Puea Thai Party, told thousands
of cheering supporters in Nakhon Ratchasima, northeast of the capital.
Anti-government protesters have blocked main Bangkok intersections
for weeks with tents, tyres and sandbags, seeking to unseat Yingluck and
halt the influence of her billionaire brother, Thaksin Shinawatra, an
ousted former premier regarded by many as the real power behind the
government.
Four protesters and a police officer were killed on Tuesday when
police tried to reclaim protest sites near government buildings.
The protests are the biggest since deadly political unrest in 2010,
when Thaksin's "red shirt" UDD supporters paralysed Bangkok in an
attempt to remove a government led by the Democrat Party, now the main
opposition party.
Suthep, at the time a deputy prime minister, sent in troops to end
that protest. More than 90 people were killed and 2,000 wounded during
those clashes.
Source : Yahoo
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» Young brother and sister killed in Thai bomb blast
Young brother and sister killed in Thai bomb blast
Written By Unknown on Sunday, 23 February 2014 | 20:25
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