New Straits Times

THAI COPS MONITORING MUSLIM STUDENTS

Muslim student group wants police to drop order requesting varsities for intel

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ATHAI Muslim student group yesterday called for police to drop an order requesting universiti­es to provide “intelligen­ce” on Muslim students and their activities in the Buddhist-majority state.

Muslims make up Thailand’s second largest religious group, with the majority residing in its three southernmo­st states, which since 2004 have been in the grip of a conflict between Malay-Muslim separatist rebels and authoritie­s.

Rights groups have long accused the state of heavy-handed sweeps of the majority MalayMusli­m population in that region, which is under martial law.

Last week the Special Branch Bureau issued a nationwide order to universiti­es to provide “intelligen­ce” on Muslim students and their activities in school, police spokesman Krissana Pattanacha­roen said Tuesday, citing “security” concerns.

The news sparked outrage from the community, and the Muslim Students Federation of Thailand yesterday called for Parliament to “cancel” the request.

The Special Branch’s order “is also a form of discrimina­tion that breaches the Constituti­on”, president Ashraf Awae said, speaking outside Parliament.

Such “groundless accusation­s... could create divisions among the Muslim students and others in the university and society,” he said.

He added that the federation had already heard of police requesting informatio­n on Muslim student groups from at least three major universiti­es.

Junta chief-turned-prime minister Prayuth Chan o Cha on Tuesday defended the Special Branch, and denied creating a “database” would be a violation of people’s rights.

“We can’t arrest anyone if they don’t do anything wrong,” he said.

Prayuth’s backing shows an “alarming trend of growing Islamophob­ia in Thailand”, said Human Rights Watch’s Sunai Phasuk.

“This is state-sanctioned discrimina­tion,” he said, adding that the Constituti­on explicitly prohibited discrimina­tion towards different religions and ethnic groups.

“It could feed into radicalisa­tion of Muslims in the deep south and worsen the conflict,” Sunai said.

The ex-general had mastermind­ed a coup in 2014, leading a five-year junta regime before elections in March formally installed him as a civilian prime minister thanks to a new Constituti­on tilted to the military.

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