Bangkok: Thailand’s pro-democracy protesters clashed with police and royalist group dressed in yellow on Tuesday in front of the Parliament where lawmakers are considering proposals to amend the constitution, one of the core demands of the nation's student-led pro-democracy movement.
Hundreds of police officers had been watching over the demonstrators, who had gathered outside Thailand's Parliament for the anti-government rally.
Pro-democracy protesters at the site were initially pushed back by police water cannons. As the number of protesters increased from the hundreds to the thousands later in the day, some broke police fences and threw water bottles towards water cannon trucks and pro-government demonstrators.
Read:|Anti-government protesters hold rally in Bangkok
Nearby, politicians began to hear seven draft constitutional amendments, which were scheduled to be voted on in a two-day joint session of the House and Senate.
The amendments are scheduled to be voted on, but it is not expected that Parliament at this point will agree on specific changes for inclusion in a new charter.