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='''THE SOUTH THAILAND INSURGENCY IS CAUSED BY THOSE HELLISH ISLAMIC BASTARDS'''= |
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The '''South Thailand insurgency''' is a separatist campaign in the three southern provinces of ], which are predominantly ] and ]. The leadership and objectives of the groups conducting the insurgency are little understood, even in Thailand. Over a thousand people have been killed in the region over the past decade. In July ] the ], ], assumed wide-ranging emergency powers to deal with the insurgency. |
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==Background== |
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The Kingdom of ] exercised a loose sovereignty over the northern part of the ], including the Sultanates of ], ], ], ] and ], from the 16th century (see ]). In ], Pattani was formally annexed by Siam. Seven years later, under the ], the ] colonial administration in ] forced the King of Siam to cede sovereignty over all of these except Pattani to Britain, while British recognized Siamese sovereignty over Pattani, which became a ] (region) of Siam. In ] the monthon was divided into the provinces of ], ] and ]. |
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During the 20th century the area was to some extent assimilated into Thai society. Most people acquired Thai names, and there was substantial Thai Buddhist settlement in the area. Today Thai is the language of government and business and most southerners speak and understand Thai. But some 2.6 million people in the three provinces, as well as some districts in ] province, still speak Malay as their first language, and have remained loyal to Islam despite considerable Buddhist missionary efforts. The Pattani Malays have, however, little sense of connection with the Malays of modern ], and they speak a distinct local version of the language. |
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There has been a separatist movement in Pattani since at least the 1930s, but under successive Thai military regimes it was firmly suppressed. During ], when Thailand under the nationalist regime of Marshal ] was an ally of Japan, ], a prominent Pattani leader who was the son of the last Raja of Pattani, allied himself with the British in promises that after the war should they win, Pattani would be granted independence. After the war, there was an attempt to establish a "Greater Malay Pattani State" (Negara Melayu Patani Raya), but the British gave this movement no support and hopes of an independent Pattani were shattered. |
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In the late 1940s when the Phibun regime tried to impose Thai-language education on the area. The Pattani leader ] (who had supported the Japanese during war as a rival to the pro-British Tengku Mahmud Mahyuddin), wanted cultural autonomy but not independence. He was imprisoned in ] and killed by police shortly after his release in ]. There was then little overt secessionist agitation until the liberalisation of Thai politics in the 1980s, but separatist groups such as the ] (Barasan Revolusi Nasional, BRN) survived and maintained a base of support. |
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Renewed agitation began in the 1990s, led by Malay intellectuals influenced by revolutionary and ] ideas from the ]. The BRN split into three rival factions, of which the most militant were the BRN Coordinate and the BRN Congress. The BRN Congress is now regarded as the most active group, but there are several others, and competition between these militant groups has helped fuel the insurgency. It is believed that there is now a co-ordinating body called the ] (Dewan Pembabasan Pattani or PULO), although little is known about the composition or leadership of the various groups. |
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PULO's platform is highlighted by its Islamic nationalist goals, calling the Thai presence in Pattani "a colonisation" and an "illegal occupation." Its stated aims are to secede from Thailand through military and political means, and to create a state named Patani Darussalam (Pattani, Land of Peace). The PULO flag has four red and white stripes and a black rectangular on the upper left with a crescent and a star. |
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==The current insurgency== |
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The Pattani separatist groups began to use violent tactics only after ], under the influence of foreign Islamist groups such as ] and ]. A number of Pattani Muslims are reported to have recieved training at al-Qaida centres in ], and the Pattani insurgents have forged links with groups such as the ] in the ] and the ] (GAM) in ]. Attacks were made on police stations and military depots, schools and other symbols of Thai authority in the region were burned, and local police and government officials were assassinated. |
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The government at first blamed these attacks on "bandits," and indeed some outside observers believe that local clan, commercial or criminal rivalries do play some part in the violence in the region. But the mounting scale and sophistication of the insurgency eventually prompted the government into a recognition that there was a serious issue in the southern provinces. |
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During ] and ] the level of violence in the south increased, with insurgents killing some 600 people in a series of bombings and shootings aimed mainly at police and military, but also affecting many civilians. Some bombings were directed at non-Muslim Thai residents of the area, leading to an exodus which has damaged the regional economy and increased its isolation from the rest of Thailand. Much of Thailand's current prosperity, based on tourism, has passed the south by, and it remains one of the poorest parts of the country. |
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The Thai response to the insurgency was hampered by a lack of training in counter-insurgency methods, lack of understanding of local culture, and rivalries between the police and the army. Many local police are involved in the local drug trade and other criminal activities, and army commanders from Bangkok treated them with disdain. The army responded to insurgent attacks with heavy-handed raids on Muslim villages, which only increased sympathy for the insurgents. It is a well-known insurgent tactic to provoke governments into disproportionate responses, but the Thai authorities lacked sufficient experience to appreciate this. |
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The growth of the Pattani insurgency coincided with the election of Thaksin Shinawatra as Prime Minister of Thailand in January ]. Although there is no overt secessionist party in the south, voters in the southern province overwhelmingly voted for the ] and against Thaksin's ] party, at both the ] and ] elections, leading Thaksin to treat the area as "enemy territory." Thaksin's response was to pour more troops and police into the area, driving moderate Muslim opinion into the arms of the secessionists. |
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In ] Thaksin said: "There's no separatism, no ideological terrorists, just common bandits." By ] he had changed his mind, and had come to regard the South Thailand insurgency as the local front in the global ]. Pattani, Yala and Narathiwat were put under martial law in January ]. Military violence increased, with some 200 local Muslims killed by troops during the year. In April troops killed over 100 young Muslim men in Yala province who attacked well-defended police stations with only light weapons, in what police described as "suicidal" attacks. |
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==The Tai Bak incident== |
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In October ] the town of ] in Narathiwat province saw the most highly publicised incident of the insurgency. Six local men were arrested, accused of having supplied weapons to the insurgents. A demonstration was organised to demand their release. The police called in army reinforcements. The army used tear gas and water cannons on the crowd, and shooting started in which six men were killed. |
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Hundreds of local people, mostly young men, were arrested. They were made to take off their shirts and lie on the ground. Their hands were tied behind their backs. Later that afternoon, they were thrown by soldiers into trucks to be taken to an army camp in the next province of Pattani. The prisoners were stacked five or six deep in the trucks, and by the time the trucks reached their destination three hours later, in the heat of the day, 78 men had suffocated to death. |
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This incident sparked widespread protests across the south, and indeed across Thailand, since many non-Muslim Thais were appalled at the army's behaviour. Thaksin, however, gave the army his full support, and no-one has been charged with any offence in relation to the Tai Bak incident. His first response was to defend the army's actions, saying that the 78 men died "because they were already weak from fasting during the month of ]." |
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During ] the insurgency has continued, with a major attack being launched on the provincial capital of ] in July. In response, Thaksin issued a decree giving himself sweeping powers to direct military operations, suspend civil liberties and censor the press. This action sparked protests from liberal sections of the Thai media and opposition parties. |
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Estimates of the strength of the insurgency vary greatly. In ] General ] said that there were only 500 hard-core insurgents. Other estimates say there as many as 15,000 armed insurgents. Thai analysts believe that foreign Islamist groups are infilitrating the area, and that foreign funds and arms are being brought in. |
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A striking aspect of the South Thailand insurgency is the anonymity of the people behind it and the absence of concrete demands. Although Thailand held free elections in February ], no secessionist candidates contested the southern electorates, and the militant groups appear to have no interest in political agitation for autonomy or independence. In July the chairman of the Narathiwat Islamic Committee was quoted as saying: "The attacks look like they are well-organised, but we do not know what group of people is behind them." |
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==See also== |
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==External link== |
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==Sources== |
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*David K Wyatt, ''Thailand: A Short History'' (Yale University Press, 2003) |
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*Pasuk Phongpaichit and Chris Baker, ''Thaksin: The Business of Politics in Thailand'' (Silkworm Books, 2004) |
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*Nirmal Ghosh, "Mystery group runs insurgency in Thai south," ''Straits Times'', 25 July 2005 |
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