The farmers used a farming truck to trample razor wires, then shoved the guarding soldiers and attempted to surround the office compound in Bangkok's northern outskirts. They demanded Yingluck meet them in person to answer when and if they will be paid, as the payments are several months overdue.
"We want the prime minister to come down to talk to us," Rawee Rungreuang, a farmers' representative told reporters outside the Office of the Permanent Secretary for Defense. "We have sympathized with the government for four months now. It's time for an answer."
Caretaker Finance Minister Kittiratt Na-Ranong said the government has paid 65 billion baht ($2 billion) and owes 110 billion baht ($3.39 billion) to the farmers.
He said the government will start paying the rest of the money through the state-owned agricultural bank.
"Considering the (bank's) capacity in handling daily payments, it is expected that all payments will be made within six to eight weeks," Kittiratt told reporters at a news conference.
The farmers previously blocked main highways in several parts of the country and came to the capital this month to demand their payments.
Rice is Thailand's staple grain and one of its main exports. In hopes of boosting rice prices and increasing rural incomes, the government bought harvests from farmers at about twice the price prevailing in global markets. The program backfired when the Commerce Ministry had difficulties selling the grain overseas as rival exporters such as Vietnam undercut it.
The populist scheme also became a target of the anti-government protesters, who claim they have raised millions of baht (hundreds of thousands of dollars) to help the farmers sue the Yingluck administration.
The government's special security command center's director and caretaker Labor Minister Chalerm Yubumrung said the Government House, where the prime minister works, will reopen this week, prompting resistance from the protesters who marched to surround the office and put up a small cement wall to seal some of its entrances.
At least 10 people have been killed and more than 600 injured in the three-month-old political conflict.
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