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Thai police, protesters meet after blast

BANGKOK, Nov. 30 (UPI) -- Bangkok police say they are meeting with anti-government protesters who are pleading for more protection after a grenade blast injured 50.

People's Alliance for Democracy protest leader Chamlong Srimuang, a former army general, met Sunday with Suchart Muenkaew, the Bangkok police chief, for 20 minutes after a grenade believed to have been hurled by counter-demonstrators injured scores of protesters occupying the offices of Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat, The New York Times reported.

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Suchart told reporters the meeting with Chamlong helped "loosen the tension and mistrust between us" as Thai news Web sites carried photos of Chamlong sitting at a table with smiling senior officers. The meeting is reinforcing notions that PAD has powerful backers among the Thai elite who are preventing a crackdown on the demonstrators, the Times said.

PAD protesters, who are seeking the resignation of Somchai, are fearful of more violence from pro-government auxiliaries known as red shirts, who held a demonstration in central Bangkok Sunday, the newspaper said. PAD is occupying Bangkok's two major commercial airports, effectively choking off Thailand's tourism trade.

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