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Originally published May 22, 2010 at 4:45 PM | Page modified May 22, 2010 at 8:06 PM

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Thai protesters' weapons cache displayed

Thai officials Saturday displayed the large cache of weapons seized from a stronghold of anti-government protesters in the heart of Bangkok that the military cleared after a violent two-month standoff and 85 deaths.

The Associated Press

BANGKOK — Thai officials Saturday displayed the large cache of weapons seized from a stronghold of anti-government protesters in the heart of Bangkok that the military cleared after a violent two-month standoff and 85 deaths.

Police also said eight Red Shirt leaders have been separated in detention, their phones have been seized and they are now under armed guard, after police were criticized as treating the protest leaders with leniency.

The weapons — including rifles, bullets, grenades and the components of bombs — were put on display to defend the government's claim that the troops faced a serious threat and exercised appropriate force when they moved in to clear the main protest area.

At least 15 people died in the final offensive Wednesday and more than 100 were wounded.

The Thai capital was gripped with its worst political violence in decades during the so-called Red Shirt occupation of downtown Bangkok, culminating in the military crackdown that sparked a rampage by supporters who launched grenade attacks and set fire to landmark buildings, including the country's stock exchange and biggest shopping mall.

"The fires in many areas in Bangkok were well prepared — step by step," army spokesman Col. Sansern Kaewkamnerd said at a news conference, where he was flanked by tables covered with the recovered weapons.

Officials said 11 soldiers and police officers were among the 85 people killed in the political violence of the past two months.

Most of the Red Shirts' leadership involved in the protests has either been arrested or surrendered, and many were being held at a seaside police camp south of Bangkok.

Many analysts believe the Red Shirt movement, which supports ousted Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, could foment unrest for months or even years to come. Thaksin, who lives in exile after his 2006 ouster in a military coup and subsequent conviction for corruption, has said he supports the Red Shirts' cause.

Bangkok remains in a state of emergency and under a nighttime curfew through the weekend. But many shops were open Saturday and traffic was returning to the city.

The capital's two major public-transit systems are scheduled to reopen Sunday with limited stops after being closed for a full week.

The government said it would allow Red Shirt gatherings, as long as they were peaceful. Thai media have reported the Red Shirts plan to stage more protests Monday.

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"They can gather together as long as they don't break the law," said government spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn.

Still, police in provincial Thailand are so on edge about the violence that rocked Bangkok that they arrested teenagers accused of playing with fireworks after dark.

The teenagers were arrested for breaking the curfew that had been set in 24 provinces. Police later found that they had fireworks, according to the ASTV satellite television network.

Police in Chonburi province, where the youths were reportedly arrested, could not be reached for comment.

There is strong anti-government sentiment in the poor, rural north and northeast, home to many of the Red Shirt protesters who feel Oxford-educated Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva and his government is elitist and came to power illegitimately.

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