Bangkok | Wed, 05/12/2010 2:15 PM | World
The Thai government turned to siege tactics Wednesday after fruitless  efforts to compromise with protesters barricaded in central Bangkok,  announcing that the army would limit supplies of water, food and  electricity to the protest zone.
Army spokesman Col. Sansern  Kaewkamnerd said security forces would "not use force at this stage,"  but his wording left open the possibility of more violence in Thailand's  two-month political standoff if the Red Shirt protesters refuse to  disperse.
"This is a full-scale measure to limit the freedom of  protesters and to close down the area 100 percent, starting at  midnight," Sansern said.
The new measures were announced a day  after Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva warned protesters who have  paralyzed Bangkok's central business district to leave by Wednesday.
The  anti-government protests have crippled the capital's ritziest shopping  district, forced the closure of several luxury hotels and devastated the  economy, particularly the vital tourism sector.
"Electricity and  water supply, as well as food, will be limited," Sansern said, warning  that residents who live in the neighborhood's upmarket high-rise  apartments should consider alternate accommodations.
Chances of a  negotiated settlement to the standoff appeared to be unraveling.
Government  spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn said late Tuesday that the prime  minister had rescinded his compromise offer to hold early elections on  Nov. 14 as part of a reconciliation plan.
"He said there will no  longer be any more compromises or conditions," Panitan told The  Associated Press late Tuesday. "Their refusal to stop the protest meant  that the conditions that were set are being canceled, including the  election date."
The protesters vowed to hold their ground.
"The  prime minister must not threaten us and must not disperse us," said one  protest leader, Weng Tojirakarn. "If he wants more deaths, so be it. I  don't."
Several violent incidents related to the Red Shirt  protest, which started March 12, have killed 29 people and wounded more  than 1,400, according to the Health Ministry
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