Thaksin returned

Supporters of Thailand’s former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra have joined a rally in Bangkok to present a petition to the king seeking a royal pardon for his 2008 corruption conviction.

Rally organisers say up to 100,000 so-called Red Shirts were expected to join Monday’s gathering at the Sanam Luang square, close to the royal palace.

However, police have put the estimated crowd at closer to 20,000.

Al Jazeera’s Laura Kyle reporting, from the square, said protesters had begun to gather from early morning, despite heavy rains, with many bussed into the capital from rural areas in Thailand’s north and northeast where Thaksin maintains strong support.

She said the rally had an “atmosphere more of a muddy festival than an angry protest”.

Hundreds of police have been deployed to the area and the army has been put on stand-by in case of clashes between the protesters and government supporters, although rally organisers have said there will be no violence.

At around midday on Monday Thaksin, who was deposed in a bloodless coup in 2006, addressed supporters by telephone, although our correspondent said it was unclear where he was speaking from.

Thaksin returned to Thailand in early 2008 but fled the country months later, shortly before Thailand’s supreme court found of him guilty of conflict of interest and sentenced him to two years in jail.

He has been in exile ever since travelling between residences in, among others, Dubai, Hong Kong and Nicaragua – which has appointed him a special ambassador to promote investment in the central American country.

Red Shirt leaders have said they plan to submit a petition to the Thai king later in the day which they claim has five million signatures calling for a royal pardon for Thaksin.

The move has been criticised by opponents who say it is an attempt to drag Thailand’s widely-revered royals into a political argument.

Whether or not the pardon is granted, protest organisers said Monday’s rally would remain a visible demonstration of the support Thaksin still carries in Thailand and opposition to the current government.

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