Showing posts with label Narathiwat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Narathiwat. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 05, 2008

2 bombs in southern Thailand wound 71

Police officials survey the site of a car bomb which exploded near an outdoor meeting of village chiefs in southern Thailand's Narathiwat province November 4, 2008. (Surapan Boonthanom/Reuters)

Wednesday, November 05, 2008
By SUMETH PANPETCH

SUKHIRIN, Thailand (AP) — Suspected Muslim insurgents detonated two bombs at a tea stall and shopping area Tuesday in insurgency-wracked southern Thailand, killing one person and wounding at least 71, police said.

It was the largest attack in several months in Thailand's restive south, which has been gripped by a Muslim insurgency since 2004.

The first blast appeared to target a meeting of 300 village chiefs and local officials from Narathiwat province who were leaving their monthly meeting when the explosion occurred in the building's parking lot, said police chief Maj. Gen. Surachai Suebsuk. The bomb was hidden inside a parked car.

The building in Sukhirin district also housed an indoor fruit market that was busy with shoppers when the blast occurred about noon, at the start of the normally crowded lunch hour, he said.

"The insurgents aimed to kill," Surachai said. "Most of the wounded were civilian officials who were leaving the meeting and heading for their cars."

Minutes later, a second bomb hidden in a motorcycle went off outside a nearby tea shop, Surachai said. The police chief had initially said that three bombs exploded but then said the last blast was caused by an exploding tire, not a bomb.

Cell phone signals were cut off in the area to prevent attackers from triggering new explosions by mobile phone, he said.

There were no immediate claims of responsibility for the blasts.

Violence in the south is usually blamed on Muslim insurgents. The southernmost provinces of Narathiwat, Yala and Pattani have been terrorized by regular attacks since early 2004, when a separatist movement flared after a lull of more than two decades.

Attacks generally take the form of drive-by shootings and small-scale bombings intended to frighten Buddhist residents into leaving the area. Suspected insurgents mainly target people seen as collaborating with the government, including soldiers, police, informants and civilians.

On Aug. 21, two bombs in Narathiwat killed two people and wounded 30. The two fatalities were a Thai reporter and a rescue worker responding to the first attack when a second explosion went off.

The last large-scale coordinated attack occurred Feb. 18, 2007, when a string of bombings and shootings by suspected insurgents killed eight people and wounded almost 70 in four provinces.

More than 3,300 people have been killed since January 2004 in the three provinces, which are the only Muslim-dominated areas in the Buddhist-majority country.

Thailand's population is about 90 percent Buddhist, and many of the country's Muslims feel they are treated as second-class citizens.

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Cambodian-Muslim arrested in Sa Kaeo while carrying fake Thai citizenship ID, 6 others slipped back to Cambodia

SOUTHERN UNREST INSURGENT NETWORKS

Source: Int'l terrorists financing rebel groups

Wednesday January 30, 2008
WASSANA NANUAM MUHAMMAD AYUB PATHAN
Bangkok Post

Narathiwat - Southern insurgent networks probably receive funding from and share their ideology with international terrorist groups, a security source said yesterday.

The source said proof of the links lies in the militants' systemised management of their organisations and the pattern of violent attacks perpetrated by well-trained assailants.

The rebels also appear to be financed by international terror groups and share ideologies, the source added.

Army chief Anupong Paojinda said earlier he had new information about the southern insurgency that he planned to present to the new government.

He did not elaborate.

But the source said the new information pertained to the discovery of a link between the insurgent leaders and international terrorist groups.

It contradicts what then prime minister Surayud Chulanont said previously.

Gen Surayud on Jan 18 dismissed the idea of financial connections between local militant groups and the al-Qaeda terrorist network.

He said, however, that they shared ideologies.

Gen Anupong, who visited the provincial special task force headquarters in Narathiwat's Muang district yesterday, was told that the insurgents were losing strength as more and more of their sympathisers were cooperating with local authorities.

At a briefing by task force commander Maj-Gen Theerachai Nakwanich, he was also told that many core rebel members were being arrested.

In Yala, an 80-strong combined force of police, soldiers, and rangers raided a fruit orchard in Bannang Sata district after the authorities were told Ma-aea Apibanbae, a Runda Kumpulan Kecil core leader, and his underlings were hiding there and preparing an attack.

The force and the suspected insurgents clashed for 10 minutes, and a policeman and one suspected militant were killed.

The slain rebel was believed to be Mr Ma-aea's younger brother Sulaiman, aged 27.

Also in Yala, a rubber grower was shot dead in front of a mosque in Krong Pinang sub-district on Monday night while on his way to attend evening prayers at the mosque.

In Sa Kaeo, a Cambodian Muslim was captured yesterday for carrying a fake Thai citizenship card shortly after crossing into Thailand in Aranyaprathet district, according to rangers at the Burapha task force who intercepted the suspect, police said.

The suspect, Suem Sari, 28, is believed to have travelled with six other Cambodian nationals who slipped back into Cambodia through the checkpoint when they saw him being arrested.

The group was thought to be heading for the deep South as Suem Sari was carrying with him bus tickets from Bangkok to Narathiwat.

Suem Sari also had with him a passport, which was genuine, along with five ATM cards.

Monday, January 14, 2008

Eight Thai soldiers killed in rebel ambush: army

CHANAE, Thailand (AFP) — Separatist rebels killed eight Thai soldiers and tried to decapitate them after ambushing a military convoy in the restive Muslim-majority south Monday, officials said.

It was the single deadliest attack against the military in the region since June last year, when seven troops were killed in an ambush of a security team protecting teachers.

In the latest incident, a powerful bomb overturned the soldiers' humvee in Narathiwat province and tore a one-metre (three-foot) crater into the road as they returned from escorting teachers to school.

Those who survived the blast were shot when they tried to escape, according to Lieutenant Colonel Kannart Nikornyanont, one of the top provincial military commanders.

Militants attempted to behead all eight soldiers. They decapitated the top officer in the group and left the others with gaping stab wounds to the neck, he told AFP.

"They cut off the head of one of the soldiers, while the rest suffered deep wounds that left their heads partially severed," Kannart told AFP.

The officer's head was left near the wreckage of the humvee.

Four soldiers travelling by motorcycle with the humvee vehicle managed to escape injury after a 15-minute gun battle with the militants, he said.

The attack happened around 9:40 am (0240 GMT) in the Chanae district of Narathiwat, one of three provinces along the Malaysian border that has been dogged by four years of separatist violence.

The convoy was part of a security detail that had escorted teachers to their school Monday morning, Kannart said.

Armed soldiers escort teachers to and from school every day in Thailand's south. Educators are often targeted by militants, who view teachers as symbols of Buddhist Thailand's domination of this Muslim and ethnic Malay region.

Thai Prime Minister Surayud Chulanont said the latest deadly ambush was not an escalation in the conflict, saying it was instead a routine ambush with an unusually high number of victims.

"This kind of clash can happen any time. It is not a serious escalation" of the conflict, he told reporters.

"Authorities will have to investigate and not allow it to happen again."

The southern region was an autonomous Malay Muslim sultanate until Thailand annexed it in 1902, provoking decades of animosity toward the state.

More than 2,800 people have been killed since the rebellion began in January 2004, with killings growing more frequent and brutal.

Former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra's heavy-handed tactics were widely blamed for exacerbating the unrest in Yala, Pattani and Narathiwat provinces, but he was ousted in a military coup in 2006.

The generals and Surayud vowed to quell the insurgency with peace overtures to the rebels, an apology over past abuses, the reform of Islamic schools and tougher security.

Instead, they watched as killings grew more frequent and brutal, with both Buddhists and Muslims targeted every day.

An average of 72 people have been killed each month since the military took pwer in September 2006, sharply up from 53 deaths every month before the coup, figures from independent monitoring group Intellectual Deep South Watch show.

The attacks have grown increasingly grisly in recent months, with victims beheaded, mutilated and even crucified in what analysts say is an attempt to spark a backlash and create divisions between Buddhists and Muslims.

In other incidents, a roadside bomb hit another convoy of eight soldiers protecting teachers in neighbouring Yala province, local police said. Two of the troops were hurt in a subsequent five-minute gun battle.

Militants also set fire to three mobile phone towers and a telephone booth in a bid to disrupt communications around the region, police said.

Friday, November 23, 2007

11 Khmer-Islam arrested for entering Thailand illegally

22 November 2007
Excerpt from TNA (Thailand)

Meanwhile, in Sa Kaeo province bordering Cambodia, Thai Army Rangers arrested 11 Muslim-Khmer workers who tried to enter Thailand illegally at the Aranyaprathet border crossing.

According to preliminary investigation, the migrant workers departed from Cambodia's Kampong Cham province and planned to work in fisheries in Thailand's restive Narathiwat.

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Six bombs rock southern Thailand, injuring 10

BANGKOK, Aug. 1 (Xinhua) -- Insurgents launched six bomb attacks in Thailand's southern province of Narathiwat Wednesday morning, injuring at least 10 persons.

Police said the attacks were launched during 7:45 a.m. (0045 GMT) to 9 a.m. (0200 GMT) in four districts of Narathiwat.

In Narathiwat town, which is the capital of Narathiwat Province, three bombs were triggered. Two of the bombs were installed in dustbins and the other was attached on a motorcycle parking in front of a Kasikorn Bank.

The other three bombs exploded in Bacho, Sungai Kolok and Ra-ngae districts. Two soldiers were injured in the Bacho blast, local police reported.

While in Ra-ngae district, a bomb severely injured a local resident and seven others.