Bangkok (AFP) - Thailand's army chief will chair a
meeting on Wednesday between representatives from both sides of the
country's bitter political divide, a day after declaring martial law, a
military spokeswoman said.
Caretaker Prime Minister Niwattumrong Boonsongpaisan, who replaced ousted premier Yingluck Shinawatra after a controversial court ruling last week, was also invited, the military later confirmed.
Prayut invoked martial law on Tuesday, saying he had to act because political tensions have spiralled following months of deadly anti-government protests -- a move critics branded a "de facto coup".
He denied it marked a military takeover and had promised he would bring together the antagonists in #Thailand's political conflict for talks on an end to the crisis.
But the dispatch of armed troops to the streets, the shutdown of more than a dozen television stations, and the sweeping powers assumed by the military have sparked international concern over restricted civil liberties in the kingdom.
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