
Authorities have deployed hundreds of police ahead of a planned demonstration on Tuesday involving a convoy of cars congregating in the centre of Bangkok.
Police have readied 750 officers to deal with the planned car protest on Tuesday and warned that all public gatherings were currently illegal under the Covid-19 emergency.
"Any gathering or protest that risk the spread of the disease is illegal under the emergency law," Pol Lt Gen Piya Tavichai, deputy Bangkok police chief, told reporters.
Last weekend, more than a thousand anti-government protesters clashed with police.
Prominent protest leaders who had spent time in jail over previous demonstrations and been released on bail have gone back into custody in recent days.
Panupong "Mike Rayong" Jadnok and Jatupat "Pai" Boonpattararaksa surrendered to police after having their bail request rejected over new protest-related charges. Another protest leader, Parit "Penguin" Chiwarak, had his previous bail terms revoked and also surrendered to police, while human rights lawyer Arnon Nampa handed himself in over fresh protest-related charges including lese majeste for a speech he made during a protest on Aug 3.
"There has been no judgment in all these cases, so based on the law they are all still not guilty and therefore are entitled to bail," Krisadang Nutcharat, their lawyer, told Reuters.
The protest movement has been regaining momentum amid growing public anger about Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha's handling of the country's worst wave of Covid-19 infections and with the economy taking a new battering.