Protesters rallied in Bangkok on Saturday for what organisers hope will be the biggest demonstration in years to demand the removal of former junta leader and now military-backed Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, a new constitution and elections.
Some Thai protest leaders have also demanded reforms to curb the power of King Maha Vajiralongkorn's monarchy and have vowed to keep up those calls in spite of official pressure to stop.
Hundreds of protesters gathered under light drizzle on Saturday around the campus of Thammasat University, long seen as a hotbed of opposition to the military and royalist establishment.
Protesters were allowed in despite the university having previously said they could be barred.
Anti-government demonstrators hold a sign with the symbol of the protester's three-finger salute at a pro-democracy rally in Bangkok on September.
Demonstrations have built since mid-July. The biggest so far drew 10,000 in Bangkok last month, but protest leaders have said they expect this one to be much bigger.
“Today the people will demand back their power,” Arnon Nampa, a human rights lawyer who has emerged as a leading figure in the protest movement, said on Twitter.
In addition to the students who began the protest movement, people had come from other parts of Thailand.
“The government is cheating and we want to get rid of them,” said Patricia Phakkhaphinya, 35, who had come from Surat Thani, in southern Thailand.
“Everything is down and people have no money.”
An anti-government protester holds up the three-finger salute at a pro-democracy rally at Thammasat University in Bangkok on September.
Parit “Penguin” Chiwarak, one of the protest leaders, told Reuters, he believed as many as 100,000 people could show up. Police said they expected up to 50,000 to join the protest.
Thai politics has for years been marked by challenges to the royalist and military establishment by politicians backed by poor urban and rural voters, and more recently by the student protesters.
The military, which proclaims itself the defender of the country's core institutions, in particular the monarchy, has stepped in to overthrow civilian governments numerous times, most recently in 2014, citing the need to maintain stability.
READ MORE
Seven Thai parties form coalition to thwart junta
Former Thai PM quits as head of Democrats after poll loss
Thai political parties to form coalition against junta
Prayuth has said the government would allow protests as a form of free speech, but that demands for reform of the monarchy were not acceptable.
Parit said the demands would be reiterated this weekend.
On Thursday, Prayuth warned the protesters against raising the risks of spreading the novel coronavirus and urged them to put the health crisis before politics.
Police said they were deploying 10,000 officers on Saturday. Police spokesman Kissana Phathanacharoen told reporters: “I want to tell them (protesters) that it’s not right to do anything too extreme, anything illegal.”
Reuters