New Straits Times

Motorcycle bomb kills three at Yala market

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YALA: A motorcycle bomb killed three civilians and wounded two dozen others yesterday at a bustling morning market in Thailand’s insurgency-hit south, the first such attack by suspected militants on a “soft target” in the Muslim-majority region for months.

A rebellion against Thai rule in the country’s culturally distinct “Deep South” bordering Malaysia, has left nearly 7,000 dead — the majority civilians — since 2004.

The death toll last year from the insurgency was 235, the lowest in 13 years of conflict as peace talks edged forward and the Thai junta boosted its security lockdown on the region.

But yesterday’s bomb in Yala town at a packed market may indicate that militants are once more aiming attacks at civilian targets. At least two bodies lay slumped over debris in the narrow alleyway, surrounded by chunks of torn corrugated roofing, destroyed motorbikes and market stalls.

“The suspects parked the motorcycle in front of a stall selling pork in downtown Yala... it detonated 10 minutes later,” the policeman said, requesting anonymity.

“Three civilians were killed. It’s the first big attack in downtown Yala in two years.”

Two of the dead were Buddhists — the other was Muslim — while 24 people were wounded, according to an official at Yala hospital.

It was not immediatel­y clear if the bomb deliberate­ly targeted the pork stall, and potentiall­y its Buddhist customers.

An army spokesman for the region confirmed the toll and blamed “insurgents”, saying the motorbike laden with explosives fitted their modus operandi.

“The bombing shows the insurgents never stop trying to indiscrimi­nately destroy lives and property,” Pramote Prom-in said, adding the attack aimed to undermine faith in “the state security system”.

Thailand, which colonised the ethnically Malay south roughly a century ago, has for decades been confronted by fighters seeking more autonomy, but the conflict flared up into its bloodiest phase in 2004.

Rights groups have accused both the insurgents and security forces of widespread human rights abuses, with civilians trapped between the two sides.

The shadowy network of militants almost never claim attacks and rarely talk to the media.

Their cells, which operate from remote communitie­s and the forested Malaysia border zone, had in recent months stepped back from targeting civilians, including teachers and other perceived collaborat­ors with the Thai state.

 ?? AFP PIC . ?? A Thai forensics unit combing the motorcycle bombing scene at a market in the restive southern Thai province of Yala yesterday.
AFP PIC . A Thai forensics unit combing the motorcycle bombing scene at a market in the restive southern Thai province of Yala yesterday.

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