The Phnom Penh Post

Ramadan violence kills three in Thailand’s restive south

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TWO people, including a 14-yearold boy, were killed in a market place bombing in Thailand’s Muslim-majority south, a military spokesman said on Tuesday – an apparent retaliator­y attack for the killing of a wanted rebel leader.

Thailand’s three southernmo­st provinces – Yala, Pattani and Narathiwat – have since 2004 been plagued with conflict between ethnic Malay-Muslim rebels and the Buddhist-majority Thai state, which annexed the region around a century ago.

Around 7,000 people, mostly civilians, have been killed in violence that rarely makes internatio­nal headlines despite taking place a few hours south of some of Thailand’s tourist hotspots.

On Monday afternoon, the insurgents detonated a motorcycle bomb at a crowded market place in Pattani province’s Nong Chik district, killing two civilians.

“A 14-year-old boy and a 38-year-old woman died,” said Colonel Thanawee Suwannatha­t, spokesman for t he southern army.

Four military rangers were wounded in the blast.

The bombing appeared to be in “retaliatio­n” for the death of a fugitive suspected rebel leader in neighbouri­ng Yala province earlier in the day, who was shot dead as authoritie­s surrounded his house, Thanawee said.

The 37-year-old suspect, named as Abdulloh Lateh, was “head of operations” in the Yaha district.

The highly secretive rebels, who are pushing for autonomy from Thailand,

operate in small v illage cells, wit h t heir senior leaders based overseas far from t he reach of Thai aut horities.

The grinding conflict is characteri­sed by tit-for-tat attacks that usually target symbols of the Thai state and its security forces but civilians from both Muslim and Buddhist communitie­s often get caught in the crossfire.

The region usually sees an uptick in violence during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which ends next week.

Monday’s v iolence came a day after another bomb attack in Songk hla province k illed a police of ficer at a checkpoint, wounding three others.

Video footage of Sunday’s attack showed a plume of thick smoke as the blast went off, leaving a police officer’s body lying in the middle of the road.

Thailand’s junta leader Pray ut Chano-cha – who is expected to return as a civ ilian prime minister in the coming days – condemned the latest attacks as “inhuman”.

Peace talks have been inconclusi­ve despite an intensific­ation of army operations in the border zone with Malaysia.

 ??  ?? Investigat­ors inspect the wreckage of a motorcycle after a bomb blast in a flea market in the southern Thai province of Pattani on Monday.
Investigat­ors inspect the wreckage of a motorcycle after a bomb blast in a flea market in the southern Thai province of Pattani on Monday.

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