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Thai firemen spray water on the smouldering site of a fire at Thailand's biggest shopping mall - Central World - after it was set ablaze the day before following an army assault on an anti-government protest site in downtown Bangkok on May 20, 2010. Image Credit: AFP

Bangkok: Eleven leaders of the recent anti-government protests could face the death penalty after being charged on Tuesday with terrorism during the worst political upheaval in modern Thai history.

The Criminal Court denied bail for the 11 who were taken to a Bangkok prison after being charged with committing, threatening to commit and supporting terrorist acts.

While the charges carry a maximum penalty of death, executions are rare in Thailand.

The leaders, including Veera Musikapong and Nattawut Saikua, had been detained since surrendering to the government on May 19 following weeks of clashes between so-called Red Shirt protesters and security forces in which nearly 90 people were killed and more than 1,400 injured.

Most of the dead and injured were protesters, largely made up of rural and urban poor, who demanded a dissolution of Parliament and new elections, claiming the government had come to power through illegitimate means.

Since the quelling of the Bangkok protests, Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva has attempted to implement a reconciliation policy to heal the social and economic rifts in Thai society.

However, critics said the charges of terrorism will only serve to deepen the divisions and possibly lead to more violence