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A second was tossed into a crowd of anti-government supporters
gathered at the domestic Don Muang airport, injuring three others,
police said. Two other explosives were thrown in Bangkok, but no one
was injured. It is unclear who staged the attacks. The bold takeover -- carried out while the prime minister was abroad -- raised the stakes in a standoff that has seen a spike in violence in recent days and has given the tourism-dependent country a massive black eye. Airport director Serirat Prasutanont, who had tried to negotiate with the protesters to allow passengers to fly out, said the takeover "damaged Thailand's reputation and its economy beyond repair." The airport, the 18th-busiest in the world, handled over 40 million passengers in 2007. Demonstrators had swarmed the international airport overnight, breaking through police lines and spilling into the passenger terminal. Group Capt. Chokchai Saranon, a control tower official, said 50 masked protesters armed with metal rods demanded to enter the control tower Wednesday, seeking the prime minister's flight schedule. Three were allowed in, but with flights canceled, there were no controllers to provide the information and the protesters eventually left. The People's Alliance for Democracy has been trying to topple Somchai, accusing him of being the puppet of a predecessor, billionaire Thaksin Shinawatra, who was convicted of corruption and other charges. The alliance said protesters would keep the airport closed until Somchai quits. The alliance has staged a number of dramatic actions in recent months. It took over the prime minister's office in late August and twice blockaded Parliament
-- one time setting off street battles with police that left two people dead and hundreds injured. The airport blockade is a fresh blow to Thailand's $16 billion-a-year tourism industry, already suffering from months of political unrest and the global financial crisis. "We don't have an estimate of financial loss, but it is greatly damaging," said Vijit Naranong, honorary chairman of Tourism Council of Thailand.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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