Kwanchai Praipana was shot and wounded by unidentified assailants in a drive-by shooting.
Pro-Government red-shirt leader shot twice in Thailand's northeast
A
leader of the pro-government 'red-shirt' movement has been shot and
wounded outside his home in northeast Thailand, hours after Prime
Minister Yingluck Shinawatra enforced a state of emergency in Bangkok
and its surrounding areas.
Kwanchai Praipana, who leads thousands of pro-government supporters
in Udon Thani, was shot and wounded by unidentified assailants in a
drive-by shooting on Wednesday.
Speaking to Al Jazeera's Scott Heidler, a family member said Praipana
was in hospital recovering after having bullets removed from his arm
and leg in what police described as a 'politically motivated attack'.
The shooting comes shortly after the government of Yingluck
Shinawatra introduced a state of emergency to cope with protests aimed
at ousting the embattled leader from power.
The new measures, which cover Bangkok and its surrounding
provinces, allow security agencies to impose curfews, detain suspects
without charge, censor media, ban political gatherings of more than five
people and declare areas off-limits.
The decree follows increasing attacks at protest sites for which the government and protesters blame each other.
Announcing the 60-day emergency late on Tuesday, ministers said they
had no plans to clear the camps that protesters set up at seven major
road junctions in the city.
Rather, they said they wanted to prevent an escalation of violence
after deaths and injuries caused by grenade attacks on demonstrators
over the weekend.
Despite the decree, most of the capital remained unaffected by the
state of emergency, with a light police presence, no overnight curfew
and protesters on the streets.
Political tensions
The protests are the latest episode in an eight-year
political crisis that has gripped Thailand since Yingluck's older
brother, former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, was ousted by
royalist generals seven years ago.
The conflict pits the middle class of Bangkok and royalist
establishment against Yingluck and her brother and their support
base among the rural poor in the north and northeast. Protesters want Yingluck to step down to make way for an
appointed government that would oversee electoral reforms and curb the
political dominance of her family.
Protesters have threatened to disrupt the election Yingluck called
for Feb. 2. The opposition Democrat Party, closely aligned with the
protesters, is boycotting the polls.
Protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban, a former deputy prime minister has
rejected the election outright. He accuses Thaksin of corruption and
nepotism and wants to change the electoral system to eradicate the
influence of Thaksin, who lives in exile in Dubai to avoid a jail term
handed down in 2008 for abuse of power.
The Election Commission said it would seek a ruling from the
Constitutional Court on Wednesday on whether it could delay the vote.
Adding to Yingluck's problems, farmers, who are part of her core
constituency, threatened to join the protest if they did not get paid
for the rice they sold to the government under a controversial
intervention scheme.
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