The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Two policemen abducted, shot dead in south Thailand

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BANGKOK: Two Thai policemen were executed after being abducted from a tea shop in the kingdom’s violent southern borderland­s, police said yesterday, as bloodshed again spikes in a 15year insurgency.

Clashes between ethnic MalayMusli­m rebels and the forces from the Buddhist-majority Thai state which annexed the region a century ago have killed nearly 7,000 people since 2004, mostly civilians.

The death toll dropped to a record low last year as Thailand’s junta tightened its security web and militant attacks on civilians have become less frequent.

But tit-for-tat violence has spiralled in recent weeks leaving imams and Buddhist monks dead and hitting security forces protecting schools.

On Tuesday around eight suspected militants stormed a tea shop in Narathiwat province, near Malaysia’s border, Lieutenant Sarayuth Khotchawon­g told AFP.

The kidnappers abducted the two policemen, took their guns and forced them to get into a pick-up truck.

“The kidnappers abducted the two policemen, took their guns and forced them to get into a pickup truck,” Sarayuth said.

The bodies were found later a few hundred metres away.

One of the victims was Buddhist while the other was Muslim, he said.

The wife of the Muslim policeman wept inconsolab­ly as she arrived at the hospital where the bodies were taken.

The killings occurred several hours after a bomb exploded in neighbouri­ng Yala province, killing a Thai ranger on patrol.

Authoritie­s said the attacks were likely retaliatio­n after authoritie­s launched raids in nearby mountains to pursue those responsibl­e for recent assaults on soft targets.

In January, black-clad assailants shot dead two monks.

Militants also killed four civil defence volunteers in a drive-by shooting outside a school.

Security forces injured a boy as they gunned down rebels in counter-operations.

Claims of responsibi­lity are rare in a conflict where the militants melt into remote communitie­s or cross the porous border into Malaysia.

Peace talks have gone nowhere with the Barisan Revolusi Nasional (BRN), who command the majority of rebel foot soldiers refusing to join discussion­s with the Thai side.

Thailand remains unwilling to cede ground in public on demands for greater autonomy or allow internatio­nal observers to mediate talks.

In a rare public statement on Jan 4 the BRN vowed to ‘keep fighting’. — AFP

Lieutenant Sarayuth Khotchawon­g,Thai police officer

 ??  ?? Police secure the area as authoritie­s recover the bodies of a Buddhist and a Muslim policemen in the restive southern Thailand province of Narathiwat. — AFP photo
Police secure the area as authoritie­s recover the bodies of a Buddhist and a Muslim policemen in the restive southern Thailand province of Narathiwat. — AFP photo

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