KEY POINTS
  • Police set up barriers along some roads near the university and carried out security checks on Tuesday, prompting protesters to complain that they were being prevented from gathering.
  • Activists complained of a military crackdown ahead of the gathering.
  • The government has repeatedly delayed the general election, which was first tentatively set for 2015, with the latest date now February 2019. Some fear the date could be pushed back again.
Scores of Thai police ringed a Bangkok university early May 22 as protesters prepared to march to Government House to mark four years of junta rule, one of the largest acts of dissent since the military grabbed power.

Anti-government protesters began marching in Bangkok on Tuesday from a university in the Thai capital to Government House to demand that the military government hold a general election by November.

Government House and surrounding streets have been declared a no-go zone by police for the opposition march marking four years since a May 22, 2014, coup and have warned protesters not to defy a junta ban on public gatherings.