Addressing the media for the first time after staging the coup on Thursday, the military declined to specify where the detainees were held but said they were safe.
"They will be detained for up to one week depending on how directly they were involved (in Thailand's political conflict)," army spokesman Colonel Winthai Suvaree said.
The military junta continued its post-coup crackdown today and summoned 35 more people, including political activists and, for the first time, academics, to "maintain peace and order." It was not clear whether they would be detained.
"This is in a bid for everybody who is involved in the conflict to calm down and have time to think...We don't intend to limit their freedom but it is to relieve the pressure," Weerachon said.
Sporadic protests spread in the capital for a second day today as scores of demonstrators who were opposing the coup defied the military's ban on large gatherings and shouted slogans. The army have deployed soldiers to clear protesters and enforce martial law on the streets here.
The army chief and members of the junta yesterday met top government officials, provincial governors and representatives from several sectors who were ordered to report to the National Peace and Order Maintaining Council (NPOMC).
"Everything in the country must be all right before an election is held," the 60-year-old tough-talking general said.
46-year-old Yingluck was yesterday ordered to report to the army along with over 100 others, including top figures in the now-deposed government and her Pheu Thai party and many of their fierce political rivals.
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