Bracing for the worst in Bangkok as troops gather
Thai Army: Bangkok under control after Red Shirt leaders surrender Thai government rejects talksLocal media reported protesters set fire to government offices in the city of Udon Thani and vandalized a city hall in Khon Kaen. Udon Thani's governor asked the military to intervene. TV images also showed troops retreating after being attacked by mobs in Ubon Ratchathani.At least 44 people have been killed, most of them civilians, in a week of violence in Bangkok as a military attempt to blockade the protesters – who had camped in the 1-square-mile (3-square-kilometer) Rajprasong district for six weeks – instead touched off street fighting, with soldiers firing on protesters who fought back mostly with homemade weapons. The final crackdown began soon after dawn Wednesday, as hundreds of troops armed with M-16s converged on the Red Shirt base in Rajprasong, where high-end malls and hotels have been shuttered by the prolonged protest.Armored vehicles crashed through barricades of piled tires and bamboo stakes, then soldiers gradually moved toward the protesters' hub, opening fire and drawing return fire from militant Red Shirts, Associated Press journalists saw.With no hope of resisting the military's advance, seven top Red Shirt leaders turned themselves in on Wednesday afternoon, saying they cannot see their supporters – women and children among them – being killed anymore. "Brothers and sisters, I'm sorry I cannot see you off the way I welcomed you all when you arrived here. But please be assured that our hearts will always be with you," Nattawut Saikua, a key leader, said as hewas being arrested."Please return home," he said.But the Red Shirt leaders' decision to surrender – over two months after they began their protest in the Thai capital – clearly enraged some followers. Rioting spread quickly to other previously unaffected areas of Bangkok – prompting the government declaration of a curfew for at least one night – and to cities in the northeast of the country.