About 30,000 protesters launched a "people's coup" on Thailand's  government on Sunday, swarming multiple state agencies in violent  clashes, taking control of a broadcaster and forcing the prime minister  to flee a police compound.
 Police fired teargas on protesters who  hurled stones and petrol bombs in demonstrations that paralyzed parts  of Bangkok and followed a night of gun and knife battles in which two  people were killed and at least 54 wounded.
 A group of protesters  forced Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra to evacuate to an undisclosed  location from a building where she had planned to give media  interviews, while hundreds seized control of state broadcaster Thai PBS,  waving flags and tooting whistles.
 Declaring Sunday "V-Day" in a  week-long bid to topple Yingluck and end her family's more than  decade-long influence over Thai politics, protest leaders urged  supporters to seize 10 government offices, six television stations,  police headquarters and the prime minister's offices in what they are  calling a "people's coup".
 Police said the protesters had  gathered in at least eight locations. In at least three of them, police  used teargas and water canons.
National police spokesman Piya Utayo said troops were being sent to a  government complex occupied by protesters since Thursday and the Finance  Ministry, occupied since Monday. "We have sent forces to these places  to take back government property," he said on national television.
  It is the latest dramatic turn in a conflict pitting Bangkok's urban  middle class and royalist elite against the mostly rural poor supporters  of Yingluck and her billionaire brother, Thaksin Shinawatra, a former  prime minister ousted in a 2006 military coup.
 Reuters  journalists waiting to interview Yingluck inside the police Narcotics  Suppression Bureau were told by Natthriya Thaweevong, an aide for the  prime minister, that she had left after protesters made it inside the  outer part of the compound, the Police Sports Club, where the bureau is  located.
 In the early afternoon, protesters massed in front of a  police barricade outside Wat Benjamabhopit, also known as the Marble  Temple. Police fired teargas as some protesters tried to heave aside the  heavy concrete barriers.
 The deep detonation of stun grenades, followed by the jeers of protesters, echoed across the historic quarter.
"I just want the people named Shinawatra to get on a plane and go  somewhere - and please, don't come back to our country again," said  Chatuporn Tirawongkusol, 33, whose family runs a Bangkok restaurant.
 PETROL BOMBS
  Outside the Metropolitan Police Bureau, about 3,000 protesters rallied,  accusing riot-clad police of being manipulated by Thaksin, a former  policeman who rose to become a telecommunications magnate before  entering politics and winning back-to-back elections in 2001 and 2005.
  Chamai Maruchet Bridge, north of Government House, the prime minister's  offices, was a scene of nearly non-sop skirmishes, as police repeatedly  fired teargas into the stone-throwing crowd, Reuters witnesses said.  Protesters gathered near barricades spray-painted with the words "Failed  State".
 A Reuters photographer saw protesters hurl at least a  dozen petrol bombs into police positions from a college campus across a  canal from Government House.
In one of the most dramatic events, state broadcaster Thai PBS was  taken over by protesters, according to PBS and police. More than 250  mostly black-shirted protesters gathered in the parking lot, as others  streamed in.
 The executive producer at Thai PBS, Surachai Pannoi,  told Reuters the management of the station would share its broadcast  line with Blue Sky, a broadcaster controlled by the opposition Democrat  Party, starting this afternoon.
 STREET BATTLES
 Yingluck,  who won a 2011 election by a landslide to become Thailand's first female  prime minister, has called for talks with the protesters, saying the  economy was at risk after demonstrators occupied the Finance Ministry on  Monday.
 Protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban, a deputy prime  minister under the previous Democrat-led government that Yingluck's  party routed 2011, has ignored her and told demonstrators that laws must  be broken to achieve their goals.
The Democrats, Thailand's oldest political party, have not won an  election in more than two decades and have lost every national vote for  the past 13 years to Thaksin or his allies.
 Suthep has called for  a "people's council", which would select "good people" to lead,  effectively suspending Thailand's democratic system. Yingluck has  rejected that step as unconstitutional and has ruled out a snap  election.
 Thailand faces its worst political crisis since  April-May 2010, a period of unrest that ended with a military crackdown.  In all, 91 people were killed then, mostly Thaksin's supporters trying  to oust the then-Democrat government.
 Suthep faces murder charges for his alleged role in the ordering crackdown.
  Police tightened security after clashes on Saturday between supporters  and opponents of Yingluck near a sports stadium where about 70,000  red-shirted government supporters had gathered. Five big shopping malls  closed their doors in Bangkok, underscoring the economic impact of the  protests.
One "red shirt" government supporter was shot and killed outside the  stadium early on Sunday, after a 21-year-old student was fatally shot  several hours earlier.
 A red-shirt leader, Jatuporn Promphan,  said four red shirts had been killed but Reuters only confirmed one,  43-year-old Viroj Kemnak. Fifty-four people were wounded, according to  the government's Erawan emergency center.
 Thousands of government  supporters began to disperse, returning on buses to their homes in the  north after their rally was called off in a bid to defuse tensions.
  Seventeen battalions of 150 soldiers each, along with 180 military  police, all unarmed, were called in to boost security ahead of the  demonstrators' Sunday deadline for ousting the government.
  Thaksin, who won over poor rural and urban voters with populist  policies, was convicted of graft in 2008. He dismisses the charges as  politically motivated and remains in close touch with the government  from his self-imposed exile, sometimes holding meetings with Yingluck's  cabinet by webcam.
 
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