Introduction

The continuing unrest in Southern Thailand since January 2004 to present day has resulted in more than 3,611 deaths and injured about 6,073 persons

Malaysian PM readies for visit to deep South

Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak will visit Bangkok in early December before joining Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva on a tour of the three southernmost provinces

Muslim Malay of Patani

The Patani Malays or Muslim Malay of Patani are living primarily in Patani Raya, the southern provinces of Thailand..

The Ancient City of Yarang

The ancient city of Yarang was one of the biggest communities in the early historical period in the south of Thailand and believed to be the location of the ancient domain name “ Langkasuka”

Anatomy of a Forgotten Conflict

The only long-term solution combines firm action against the perpetrators of violence and "substantive autonomy" for the three southernmost provinces

Sunday, October 30, 2011

Tak Bai massacre anniversary: 15 blasts in Yala, Thailand South


Photo By STRINGER/THAILAND/REUTERS
Yala - Suspected Muslim insurgents caused more than a dozen co-ordinated explosions on Tuesday in a town in Thailand's troubled south, killing at least one civilian and two militants, a local official said.
Fifteen blasts were heard across Yala, causing chaos according to the town's governor Krisada Boonrach. He confirmed three deaths, including two militants  who were killed when what were thought to be home-made bombs exploded prematurely.
An AFP photographer at a local hospital said more than 50 wounded people, some in a serious condition, had arrived for medical treatment after the attacks, which caused a power blackout across the city.
The explosions are the latest in a series of increasingly brazen attacks by shadowy rebels in the Muslim-majority Thai south, which has been plagued by more than eight years of conflict claiming more than 4 800 lives.
On Sunday at least seven people were killed in back-to-back shooting and bomb attacks in a town in neighbouring Narathiwat province.
Late last month, more than a dozen suspected insurgents attacked a school in Narathiwat, killing four soldiers and seriously wounding one child.
The insurgents are not thought to be part of a global jihad movement but rather are rebelling against a long history of perceived discrimination against ethnic Malay Muslims by governments in the Buddhist-majority nation.
Deep South Watch, which closely monitors the conflict, said earlier this year that more than half of the victims are Muslims, many apparently targeted because they are seen as traitors for cooperating with the local authorities.
- SAPA

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