After the burning of Bangkok, shocked residents return
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 Bangkok — In a gloomy pilgrimage, shocked residents of Bangkok ventured into the heart of a city turned into a battle zone, angry and despondent at the loss of landmarks and livelihoods. Expatriates joined Thais meandering  for the first time into what was once Bangkok’s most glamorous shopping  zone, cameras in hand to record the devastation inflicted after  anti-government protests were crushed. In strange  and silent scenes, they gathered in front of Thailand’s biggest shopping  mall, Central World, reduced to a smoking ruin in a campaign of arson  and looting unleashed after Wednesday’s military offensive. Around them, squads of city workers wielded brooms and  power hoses as the city attempted to get back to business, while  enterprising street vendors offered ice creams and cold drinks in the  tropical heat. Many expats were glad to emerge  from their homes after sheltering for days as the government battled to  end two months of rallies by “Red Shirts” protesters demanding elections  and a new leadership. “We came to see the  spectacle,” said Anna Perez, a 52-year-old French woman who has lived in  Thailand for a decade. “This is just a disaster. In this country there  have been coups, but not riots like this.” The  civil unrest, which has left 86 dead and 1,900 injured since mid-March,  as well as 36 buildings torched in Wednesday’s mayhem including the  stock exchange, has shattered Thailand’s image as the “Land of Smiles.” Alan Nilson, a 30-year-old Briton who came to the ruins  of downtown Bangkok with his Thai wife and their five-year-old  daughter, was in nostalgic mood. Source: The Daily Tribune URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20100524com3.html | 
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