Sat, May 25, 2013, Rajab ul murajjab 14, 1434 A.H. : Last updated 3 hours ago
 
 
Group Chairman: Mir Javed Rahman

Editor-in-Chief: Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman
 
 
 
 World
 
 
 
Wednesday, August 08, 2012
From Print Edition
 
 

 

BANGKOK: The terrorism trial of Thai “Red Shirt” protest leaders in connection with deadly unrest in 2010 is expected to be postponed because some defendants have parliamentary immunity, the defence said on Tuesday.

 

Twenty-three figures within the movement, including four serving lawmakers, are due to appear in a Bangkok court on Thursday, but defence lawyer Karom Polpornklang said the hearing would probably be pushed back.

 

“Some of the defendants are lawmakers who have immunity. This case cannot be done individually as all the defendants were charged together and the witnesses and evidence are the same,” he told AFP.

 

One option would be for the court to schedule a hearing for after the current session of parliament ends in late November.

 

Two months of anti-government protests in Bangkok in April and May 2010 by the Red Shirts triggered a series of clashes between demonstrators and troops that left at least 90 people dead — mostly civilians — and nearly 1,900 injured.

 

Most top Red Shirts surrendered to police after the army launched a crackdown on the movement’s fortified encampment in the heart of Bangkok. No government official or military personnel has been charged over the deaths.

 

The kingdom, which remains deeply divided by the bloodshed, now has a new government allied to the Red Shirts’ hero, fugitive former leader Thaksin Shinawatra, whose sister Yingluck is prime minister.