Deadly attack on Thai protesters
May 15, 2014Police said two M79 grenades were launched into a protest camp near the city's Democracy Monument at 3 a.m. local time (2000 UTC) on Thursday, followed by gunshots.
One of the dead was said to have been a sleeping protester while the other was believed to have been guarding the site. Bangkok's Erawan Medical center said that 22 people had also been wounded.
There were no initial indications as to who was responsible for the attack, which takes the death toll from the past six months of violence in Thailand to 27.
The anti-government protesters are urging the Thai Senate to invoke a clause that would remove a caretaker government loyal to deposed Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra. Largely royalist opponents of the government claim it is little more than a puppet of exiled former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra - Yingluck's brother.
Red Shirts' civil war threat
Thailand's political crisis deepened last week when the country's Constitutional Court removed Yingluck from her post as premier - as well as nine cabinet ministers - over an abuse of power case.
Fears have grown over the past week that the political discord could in turn be played out on the streets, with "Red Shirt" supporters of Yingluck's Puea Thai party - who have vowed to defend the government - rallying in a nearby suburb of the capital.
The Red Shirts have become increasingly disgruntled since Yingluck's removal from office, warning of a civil war if their government is deposed and a new prime minister appointed.
rc/jm (AP, AFP, Reuters)