Despite being addressed through the streets of Bangkok a few months ago, the Red Shirts are grouped in the north for yet another battle against the Thai government. Civil War inches closer and closer. "We want to continue to fight?" shouts a challenge to an angry mob Red Shirt - "fight!" weep, as video of brutal aggression of the army on red shirts fluttering in May on a projector. Now the emergency decree was lifted, the Red Shirts have resurfaced in "Thaksin Town" - the birthplace of their principalsupporter, former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra. Under the ban to continue the discussion of the sick King, tensions were simmering: "Thailand is a stupid country, we can not say what we think." Yet the presence of armed guards in protests in May betraying non-violent image of the movement. "Both sides are illiberal and have been shown to have anti-democratic tendencies." Despite renewed protests, some hard-line Red Shirts are still in hiding. A woman on the run with a groupof the main Red Shirts also argues that the Thai government has put together a list of death: "We knew we were no incidents in our club - people being hunted down." Speaking in disguise, one of the men says he is hiding with more violence is inevitable: "the end of these problems in Thailand ... it is civil war." Manufactured by SBS Distributed by Journeyman Pictures
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