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Thailand: Protesters' deaths raise fears of attack
By David Fullbrook

BANGKOK - Deaths of scores of Muslim protesters while in the hands of security forces in southern Thailand on Monday night after their arrest at a huge demonstration in Narathiwat that day has driven yet another wedge between Muslim Thais and the government, heightening fears that militants will strike back in spectacular fashion.

Police and soldiers arrested about 1,300 protesters among an agitated mob of 3,000 at Tak Bai district police station demanding the release of six village defense volunteers held on charges of stealing government weapons. Crowded into tarpaulin-covered army trucks, 78 protesters died after waiting inside the trucks for at least six hours to be driven to a military base in neighboring Pattani, 120 kilometers from the station.

Respected pathologist Dr Pornthip Rojanasunant, deputy director of Thailand's Forensic Science Institute, inspected the corpses, attributing 80% of the deaths to suffocation and heat stroke, the rest to convulsions. She said most of the dead perished immediately behind each truck's cab. Many were already weak from fasting in observance of Ramadan.

Officials only announced the deaths late Tuesday afternoon as rumors swirled, despite the deaths occurring late Monday.

Manit Suthaporn, justice deputy permanent secretary, said a shortage of transport vehicles forced troops to overload the trucks. It is unclear, however, why the 1,000 troops and police present did not detain the protesters until more trucks arrived.

Also on Monday, security forces fished three more people out of the Tak Bai river. Another six protesters were found dead after security forces moved to disperse the protest using water cannons, tear gas and firing shots, which, they claim, were fired only into the air.

Pornthip said 16 protesters were hospitalized with critical gunshot wounds, despite government officials insisting police and troops did not fire at the protesters.

Security forces said the protest was well organized and directed by the shadowy militants behind April's siege at Narathiwat's Krue Se Mosque. Troops stormed the mosque, disobeying orders not to from Deputy Prime Minister Chavalit Yongchaiyudh, a retired general, killing 32 inside, some of whom were armed.

In this latest encounter, police and troops found four M-16 and three AK-47-type assault rifles, plus a pistol, 14 machetes, ammunition and four hand grenades around the Tak Bai police station.

Incompetence and disdain appear to have caused the deaths rather than any conscious decision, which is perhaps even more worrying as it suggests a callous disregard on the part of security forces, more so given that this occurred during Ramadan, which ends with Eid, Muslims' equivalent of Christmas.

Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra remains unbowed - apparently unwilling to countenance subtler, softer strategies - backing his troops wholeheartedly. "If we're soft, they'll think we're caving in. I won't have it," said Thaksin, as reported by the Bangkok Post. "They did a great job. They have my praise."

Islamic leaders fear repercussions. "I was totally shocked. The number of people who were reportedly killed initially was only five or six. Now it is 78. This is totally insane. Certainly, this will escalate further and who knows what will happen next," said Abdullahman Abdulsomat, chairman of Narathiwat provincial Islamic committee, according to the Bangkok Post.

"The situation down here will definitely turn much bloodier. Those militants who were responsible for trouble in the area will fight back harshly with suicide attacks," warned Nideh Waba, chairman of a private Islamic schools association in the three Muslim-majority provinces of Narathiwat, Pattani and Yala.

Efforts to build trust and bridges between Muslim Thais and the state since the storming of the Krue Se Mosque are for naught now, worried the Bangkok Post in an editorial: "The tragedy on Monday might deal a serious blow to the government's efforts to win back the trust and confidence of our southern Muslim brethren. Trust is vital in the war against Islamic militancy bent on creating an Islamic state in southern Thailand."

Meanwhile, The Nation, Thailand's other English-language daily, feared that the deaths will delay reconciliation and presage more trouble. "What happened in the province provides a cruel picture of the nation's future: the deep south will continue to burn. All the efforts - utmost or misguided, sincere or political - are now in danger of going down the drain. We have found ourselves in the most precarious state yet as far as the troubled region is concerned."

Elsewhere in Narathiwat, gunmen shot five people on Tuesday, killing one. Such hit-and-run attacks, usually by two people on a motorbike targeting security forces or state officials, are daily occurrences in the Muslim-majority provinces.

After a few quiet decades, unrest began growing in southern Thailand in 2002, triggered, some say, by the US-led invasion of Afghanistan and a perception of worldwide harassment of Muslims. This was coupled with a feeling of abandonment by the state, busy focusing its development efforts on Buddhist areas of Thailand.

While these factors may play some minor part in the recent violence, behind-the-scenes wheeling and dealing by business cliques, including police, soldiers and politicians battling for turf, recognition from Bangkok, and more padded contracts have also played a part. Regardless, it is a dangerous game, one that may well be spiraling out of control.

With each major incident fears grow of a major attack, possibly one involving a car bomb or suicide bombers, designed to embarrass Bangkok, scare off tourists and undermine the kingdom's reputation for public safety. Inevitably, such attacks require dozens of innocents caught in the wrong place at the wrong time to die.

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Oct 28, 2004
Asia Times Online Community



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