Protesters Pelt Thai PM With Shoes
Irate Telecom Workers Hurl Objects And Abuse At Somchai Wongsawat In Parking Garage
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Anti-government protesters step on a poster of Thai Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat in Bangkok, Thailand, Oct. 17, 2008. (AP Photo/Sakchai Lalit)
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Deposed Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra smiles as he waits in a lounge before boarding a flight to Thailand at the Hong Kong International Airport, Feb. 28, 2008. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung)
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Photo Essay Thai Turmoil Thousands of protesters barricade Parliament, sparking clashes with police.
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Timeline Tension In Thailand Key dates in the country's long-running political crisis
Somchai Wongsawat's security agents and police shielded him from the objects and hustled him into a waiting car, which sped off in a motorcade.
The protest was staged by more than 100 employees of the state-owned telecom operator TOT during a visit by Somchai to their headquarters outside the capital, Bangkok.
"It was not a serious protest," Somchai later told reporters. He described the incident as a "colorful protest."
It marked the first time in Thailand's months of political crisis that state employees have come into direct confrontation with the prime minister.
It was not, however, the first time that Somchai has had to make a quick getaway.
On October 7, Somchai escaped a violent protest outside Parliament by climbing over a back fence to safety. Riot police outside the building fired tear gas to disperse rowdy protesters, leaving hundreds injured and two dead.
Wednesday's rally started outside the TOT headquarters, on the grounds of the Ministry of Information and Communications Technology.
Somchai's motorcade detoured into an underground parking lot to avoid the crowd shouting "Somchai, Murderer!" in reference to the two fatalities at the Oct. 7 protest.
Protesters swarmed around him in the parking lot, waving noisy plastic clappers shaped like giant hands.
After holding a meeting inside the building, Somchai exited through the main entrance, where more protesters had gathered. Some hurled clappers at his entourage and plastic water bottles and shoes.
Throwing shoes is particularly insulting in Thai culture, which considers feet the dirtiest part of the body.
Somchai, who took office last month, has come under growing pressure to step down to ease Thailand's deepening political crisis.
He has repeatedly ruled out stepping aside, saying it would not resolve the country's political crisis.
Somchai is a brother-in-law of deposed Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, around whom the crisis revolves.
Thaksin was convicted of corruption and sentenced to two years in prison in a landmark ruling Tuesday. But he is currently living in self-imposed exile in London and most Thais doubt he will ever serve time behind bars.
The verdict was widely expected to embolden anti-government protesters and prolong a stalemate that has paralyzed Thailand's government. Protesters have branded Somchai a Thaksin puppet.
Thaksin, who was ousted by a 2006 coup, remains the country's most influential politician. He is adored in rural areas, where he built up a political base during his six years in power, but reviled by many of the educated elite in the cities, where his administration was seen as deeply corrupt.
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- Does anyone know how the brother-in-law took over the PM job? I know I could research it myself but it''s late and I''m tired. Got a big day tomorrow. Fifty words or less.
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