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In a press release Monday from London, an international law firm said that it had been appointed counsel to Thaksin "to assist in the current contentious struggle for the restoration of democracy and rule of law in the Southeast Asian nation." Abhisit's five-point plan calls for respect for the monarchy, reforms to solve economic injustices, free but responsible media to be overseen by an independent watchdog agency, independent investigations of violence connected with the protests that caused 27 deaths and almost 1,000 injuries, and amendment of the constitution to make it more fair to all political parties. "Many people feel they have not been treated justly, that they have not been given opportunities, and that they have been bullied by some powerful figures," he said, offering to address the problems in a systematic manner, including improved educational opportunities and health services. Abhisit's speech was his first real effort to reach out to his opponents after several weeks of treating their protests as mainly a security problem and accusing "terrorists" in their ranks of being responsible for the deadly violence. In suggesting how media should be free but not used as "political tools" to provoke violence and conflicts, he acknowledged that state-owned TV channels have been criticized for their bias. His government has tried to stop a Red Shirt satellite TV station from broadcasting and blocked scores of websites seen as sympathetic to the protesters. Abhisit's proposal for reforming the constitution acknowledged grievances of "political injustice." Thaksin's supporters have been critical of laws enacted after the coup and court rulings targeting them, especially a 2008 court ruling disbanding Thaksin's Thai Rak Thai party and banning him and more than 100 other party executives from public office until 2012. Tharit Pengdit, chief of the Department of Special Investigations -- Thailand's FBI
-- announced that two men had been arrested and an array of weapons seized in a raid in Bangkok on Monday morning. Evidence suggested the man were linked to the Red Shirts and had shot at a military helicopter, he said. The weapons included 107 Molotov cocktails, an M-16 assault rifle, a carbine rifle, five AK-47 rifles, tear gas bombs, smoke bombs and ammunition, he said.
Associated Press writers Grant Peck, Jocelyn Gecker, Ravi Nessman and Denis D. Gray contributed to this report.
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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