Saturday, August 28, 2010

publisher killed in Bangkok protests

BANGKOK Sat April 10, 2010 2:40pm EDT An undated print of Reuters radio cameraman Hiro Muramoto. Muramoto, a 43-year-old Japanese national, was shot passed on April 10, 2010 during a aroused strife in in in in between Thai infantry and anti-government protesters in Bangkok that killed twelve people. REUTERS/Staff

An undated print of Reuters radio cameraman Hiro Muramoto. Muramoto, a 43-year-old Japanese national, was shot passed on April 10, 2010 during a aroused strife in in in in between Thai infantry and anti-government protesters in Bangkok that killed twelve people.

Credit: Reuters/Staff

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BANGKOK (Reuters) - A Reuters radio cameraman was shot passed on Saturday during a aroused strife in in in in between Thai infantry and anti-government protesters in Bangkok that killed twelve people.

World

Hiro Muramoto, a 43-year-old Japanese national, was shot in the chest and arrived at Klang Hospital but a pulse, sanatorium Director Dr Pichaya Nakwatchara said.

Muramoto, who had worked for Reuters in Tokyo for some-more than fifteen years, was tied together with dual children.

"I am dreadfully saddened to have lost the co-worker Hiro Muramoto in the Bangkok clashes," pronounced Reuters Editor-in-Chief David Schlesinger.

"Journalism can be a terribly dangerous contention as those who try to discuss it the universe the story bearing themselves in the core of the action. The complete Reuters family will weep this tragedy."

Muramoto had been covering fighting in in in in between infantry and protesters in the Rajdumnoen Road area where soldiers non-stop glow with rubber bullets and rip gas, as well as live rounds in to the air, in Bangkok"s misfortune domestic assault in eighteen years.

The sanatorium executive pronounced the bullet had exited his back. He did not know what kind of bullet it was.

An armed forces orator pronounced protesters were armed with guns and had been throwing motor fuel bombs and grenades at troops.

Twelve people, together with 3 soldiers, were killed and some-more than 500 people bleeding in the fighting nearby the Phan Fah overpass and Rajdumnoen Road in Bangkok"s old quarter, a criticism bottom nearby supervision buildings and the informal U.N. headquarters.

(Writing by Jason Szep; Editing by John Chalmers and Nick Macfie)

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