Anti-government protesters have agreed to a one-day truce in honor of the revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej's 86th birthday on Thursday, but vowed to maintain pressure on the government before and after the royal birthday.
Despite pledges to stage a peaceful march Wednesday, protesters knocked over concrete barriers, cut barbed wire and tried to scale the fences at the police compound in central Bangkok, which is across from some of the capital's biggest and fanciest shopping malls.
The commotion didn't last long. Police opened the gates to let the group of a few hundred protesters inside, and after claiming a symbolic victory the protesters filed out peacefully.
Authorities used the same strategy a day earlier at sites where violent clashes had erupted between police and protesters intent on seizing government offices, including the prime minister's compound, known as Government House, and the nearby Metropolitan Police Headquarters, which are located in Bangkok's historic district.
The government's move was widely seen as offering demonstrators a face-saving way out of a crisis that has killed four people and wounded more than 256 since the weekend.
The king's annual birthday celebration is a holiday that holds deep significance in Thailand, and many are looking to the king's traditionally televised speech Thursday as an important indicator of how the palace views the recent protests.
Bhumibol is a constitutional monarch with no formal political role, but he has repeatedly brought calm in times of turbulence and is looked to as a moral guide and unifying figure in Thailand. Violence on the day of his birth would be a major sign of disrespect.
As part of the truce, thousands of protesters cleared out of their main gathering point at Democracy Monument. Cleanup crews scrubbed the sidewalks and streets around the Bangkok landmark on Wednesday, clearing mounds of trash and debris left by the protesters who had camped there for over a week.
Some of the fiercest clashes took place outside of Government House, where mobs had lobbed petrol bombs at police who fired back clouds of tear gas, rubber bullets and water canons.
On Wednesday, Yingluck returned to her office at Government House for the first time since Friday to meet with Cabinet ministers and senior economic officials, Thai media reported. She was scheduled to leave in the evening for the seaside town of Hua Hin, where the aging king will host official ceremonies for his birthday.
Protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban vowed Tuesday to keep up the struggle to topple Yingluck and uproot the influence of her brother, former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, from Thai politics. Thaksin was ousted in a 2006 military coup, and Yingluck's rivals have repeatedly accused her of being Thaksin's puppet.
Suthep said that after a Thursday truce, "our battle" will begin again early Friday.
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