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<div>&nbsp;</div> <div>Thai police arrested Supanmanee Choochaw on Friday after she joined an anti-coup protest at the Victory Monument and sprayed "No Coup" on the hood of the military’s Humvee on Wednesday.&nbsp;</div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div>Supanmanee, 42, a civil servant at Education Ministry, was charged with making public assembly of more than five people, obstructing the authorities’ duty and destroying the state’s properties.&nbsp;</div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div>The police said they will filed the charges at the Martial Court on Saturday.</div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div>The the coup makers has emp </div>
<div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div>Thai authorities will spy on the country’s popular mobile chat applications by infiltrating into chat groups which are suspected of disseminating anti-junta comments. </div></div>
<div>&nbsp;</div> <div>The police on Wednesday charged Chaturon Chaisang, former minister who did not report himself to the military junta, with defying the coup makers’ orders and causing unrest. The Martial Court denied Chaturon’s bail request. &nbsp;</div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div>He face up to two years in jail for defying the junta’s order and face up to seven years in jail for causing unrest as an offence under the Article 116 of the Criminal Code.&nbsp;<span style="font-size: 12px;">He was jailed at the Bangkok Remand Prison. </span></div>
<p>An anti-coup protester was arrested at the Victory Monument, Bangkok, on Wednesday evening.&nbsp;</p> <p>The military arrested the 40-year-old man at the Victory Monument shortly after the national anthem ended at 6pm. He was now detained at the office of the Crime Suppression Diivision.&nbsp;</p> <p>He told Prachatai on Thursday that he came to protest alone and was arrested when he was about to go home.&nbsp;</p> <p>He said he owns a small construction company.&nbsp;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p>
<div>&nbsp;</div> <div>Four people, including three local red-shirt leaders, and one civic society activist, have been arrested by the military in northeastern Ubon Ratchathani province. Only the activist has been released but on the condition that he has to report himself to the military everyday, according to a source, asked not to be named.</div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div>The three local red-shirt leaders are Sawas Kukaew, Somjit Suthipan, and Pichet Tabudd. </div>
<div>&nbsp;</div> <div> <div>Thailand’s military junta blocked access to the ‘Midnight University’ website on Wednesday. (http://www.midnightuniv.org) The site had also been temporarily blocked shortly after the 2006 coup. </div></div>
<div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div>The military on Tuesday reportedly arrested 10 more red-shirts in northern Chiang Mai Province and raided the office of Rak Chiang Mai 51 Radio, a community radio station of the major red-shirt faction in the province. </div></div>
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