Troubles in the South
- April 2005
Troubles in the South index page
Fear
stalks Thai Muslim south, cripples economy -
Reuters, April 29, 2005
Police leaflet
- April 27, 2005
Translation of a leaflet distributed by police in Yala:
Transfer your eyes
to be capital
The country needs participation, Yala residents' safety
is in your eyes.
Buying clues concerning security, crime and drugs
The provincial police constabulary of Yala needs information
and clues that lead to tranquility
Your clues have value from 300 to 10 million baht
You do not need to tell your name, information. There
will be no record, photo, or inquiry.
We need only the truth that you know and you see
Method: Call to inform the information or clue including
your bank account, your useful information and lead to
the officer. We will transfer money to you immediately.
The call is 3 baht. You may get 10 million baht. Call
0-7321-1800 or 0-1092-2678.
The Investigative Provincial Police Constabulary of Yala
Bangkok
bomb threat dismissed - TNA,
April 26, 2005
Thailands government has dismissed bomb threats
to Bangkok as rumour and speculation. Recent newspaper reports
had misinterpreted the police order to increase security
in the capital city, the Interior Minister Pol. Gen. Chidchai
Vanasatidya said on Tuesday.
The chief of the Special Branch Police had earlier reportedly
warned of a possible bomb attack in Bangkok.
''There is no such threat. He did not say so, but the media
has misinterpreted it. He only said there was a need to
tighten security,'' said the interior minister...
Yesterday: Revenge
bombing in city
feared - Bangkok Post, April
26, 2005
[Recently, the Post has been quick to print 'bomb
in Bangkok' stories. The last one they printed was quickly
revealed to be a hoax--or at least the authorities insisted
it was (Authorities
step up security after Chao Phraya bomb plot reported
- April 13, 2005, River
bomb story dismissed - April 14, 2005). The Nation
has steered clear of these types of reports.]
Police are on the lookout for a separatist who has arrived
in Bangkok and may be preparing a car bomb in the capital
on the first anniversary of the fatal crackdown on militants
at Krue Se mosque in Pattani province on April 28 last year,
a police source said.
A reliable source at the Metropolitan Police Bureau said
yesterday that deputy Bangkok police chief Pol Maj-Gen Krisada
Pankongchuen had a meeting with senior investigators from
all sub-divisions of Bangkok police over the weekend and
discussed the arrival of the suspected separatist terrorist...
(Photo: Dr. Has for 2Bangkok.com)
Almost like being there: Yala
Dr. Has reports: April 22, 2005 - Thousands of Yala
residents from many Amphurs in Yala came out to protest
the terrorists. The banner below reads 'understand, access,
development.' [We think this is a quote from privy
councilor Gen.Prem Tinlasulanond.]
(Photo: Dr. Has for 2Bangkok.com)
A tale of two newspapers:
Krue Se and Tak Bai reports 'censored?'
- April 25, 2005
[The Post and Nation basically have the same
story of Krue Se and Tak Bai reports, explaining the reason
for the redactions, but The Nation puts 'censored'
is in the headline. TNA skips over the redactions entirely.]
Commission
to release reports into Krue Se, Tak Bai deaths - Bangkok
Post, April 22, 2005
The reports on the Krue Se and Tak Bai clashes will be
released on Sunday but some details about how almost 200
Muslims died in the encounters will be withheld so as not
to inflame unrest in the deep South, National Reconciliation
Commission chairman Anand Panyarachun said...
He would release as much as he could, but some sections
would be left out since they may affect ongoing court cases,
inflame religious and racial conflicts or have an adverse
impact on people who gave accounts of what happened.
...Nideh Waba, chairman of the group of Islamic schools
in the five southern border provinces, welcomed the decision
to release the reports saying he was one of those who had
given accounts to police...
SOUTHERN
TRAGEDIES: Reports to be censored prior to publication
- The Nation, April 22, 2005
The National Reconciliation Commission will release the
official reports on the two bloody suppression operations
at Tak Bai and Krue Se Mosque last year, but only after
screening them for sensitive sections.
The government authorised the commission on Monday
to distribute the reports as it sees fit, NRC chairman
Anand Panyarachun said yesterday.
Apart from passages endangering personal safety, prejudicing
the ongoing judicial review or fanning religious strife,
the public will get full access to the reports, he said.
Two independent committees completed their investigations
last year but the government would disclose only some of
the findings. Information on events leading up to the high
death tolls was withheld.
...Justice, legitimacy and transparency must prevail
before social strife can end...
Independent
panel descends to deep South - TNA, April 21, 2005
...The commission would also look into reports on official
investigation of last year's violent unrest at the province's
Krue Se Mosque and at the Tak Bai Police Station in the
nearby Narathiwat Province, in which scores of Muslims were
killed, at its next meeting, scheduled for 24 April, said
the journalists...
Also: 'A
tale of two newspapers' archives
A tale of two newspapers:
Krue Se and Tak Bai reports are released -
April 25, 2005
[The Post has more details from the reports and just
a passing mention that the report was released 'almost in
full.' The Nation again focuses on the 'censorship'
of the reports and has few details of the report itself.]
Use
of force at Krue Se condemned - NRC releases reports into
southern deaths - Bangkok Post, April 25, 2005
The two independent reports into the Krue Se and Tak
Bai clashes fault the use of overwhelming force and want
officials to be held accountable for the tragedies.
The reports were released almost in full by the National
Reconciliation Commission yesterday...
KRUE
SE, TAK BAI INCIDENTS: NRC releases official version
- The Nation, April 25, 2005
Anand says panel censored findings for witnesses
safety and to assist reconciliation - The National Reconciliation
Commission (NRC) yesterday released the government reports
on the Krue Se and Tak Bai incidents with parts of the documents
blacked out.
NRC chairman Anand Panyarachun said the panels censorship
was aimed at protecting the rights and safety of witnesses
and preventing negative effects on its reconciliation efforts...
Also: 'A
tale of two newspapers' archives
Queen condemns
southern 'brutes' - Urges nation to decry bandits, whose
actions are 'devoid of humanity' -
Bangkok Post, April 24, 2005
..."I must reiterate that my intention is not to
tell you to take up arms to fight the enemy. That is not
what we should do... but we have to help protect the country
without holding a weapon.''
The Thai people, the owners of the country, can no longer
afford to stand by since a grave danger now faced not only
people in southern Thailand but the welfare of the whole
nation as well as its future, she said. Thais have to help
each other just as they did during the tsunami disaster,
which had impressed her and made her proud to be Thai. "It
is time. And I invite all of you to think about what you
can do because the danger is upon the nation," Her
Majesty said.
Earlier: HM
The Queen's speech - November 19, 2004
(Photo: Dr. Has
for 2Bangkok.com)
Almost like
being there: Yala
Dr. Has reports: April 21, 2005 - A phone booth
in Amphur Raman, Yala Province burned by insurgents this
week. This is the seventh phone booth vandalized by separatists
recently.
(Photo: Dr. Has for 2Bangkok.com)
Almost like being there: Yala
- April 18, 2005
Dr. Has reports: April 18, 2005 - A fire burns in a field
of Amphur Muang and Ban Kuelae, Amphur Raman, Yala which
damaged more than 100 rai [1 rai = 1600 square metres] and
caused villagers evacuate in a disorderly manner. A strong
wind made the fire spread quickly.
JTIC
Briefing: Thai insurgents widen their target base -
Jane's, April 14
...JTIC has learned from reliable sources that Thai intelligence
agencies believe two Syrian nationals may have been involved
in both the Hat Yai blasts and a car bomb attack in Sungai
Kolok on 17 February. These suspicions throw into sharper
relief the probability of some degree of active foreign
involvement in the current campaign, in addition to the
external funding that is understood to have fuelled its
growth...

(Photo: Dr. Has for 2Bangkok.com)
Almost like being
there: Yala - April 12, 2005
This is a billboard campaigning for peace in the deep
south: ... People, put your faith and respect only
the one God, Allah. And Nabimuhammad is the religious
diplomat of Allah. Certainly, you will get the real
success...
Nobel
Peace laureate Ebadi calls for troop withdrawal, dialogue
to end bloodshed in southern Thailand
- AP, April 10, 2005
Scare
tactics - April 9, 2005
In the last few days this rumor-mongering email
(right) has been widely circulated warning that
terrorists are already in Bangkok and that everyone
should avoid major shopping areas.
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'Suspicious item' found
Posted at 20:01, April 7, 2005
- The Nation Channel is reporting a suspicious item, approximately
4kgs, found in Central Latprao on the fifth floor (The item
was in fact on the second floor, not the fifth). The area
is cordoned off while they await the bomb squad.
Posted at 20:43, April 7, 2005 - No updates on this
story yet...
Posted at 21:01, April 7, 2005 - The Nation Channel
is reporting the item was not a bomb. When checked, it was
found to be a bottle of water and a newspaper.
Thai-language editorials
- April 6, 2005
'Siang Sao Long' writes in his column in Manager Online
on April 5, 2005 that he worried that there will be coup
d'etat if the government does not start to demonstrate that
it can see through the terrorists' plans.
Bomb in the South
Posted at 10:04am, April 6, 2005
- The Nation Cahnnel is reporting a bomb went off at Sungaikolok
railway track, Narathiwat. One person found suspicions material
in a planting basin so she pulled it out and it exploded.
This happened shortly before 10:00am.
Thai
government urges citizens on alert in Bangkok -
Reuters, April 5, 2005
The Thai government urged people in Bangkok on Tuesday
to be on the alert for signs of militant attacks following
the bombing of an airport in the commercial centre of the
south by suspected Muslim extremists.
"Please help us watch out for any threat because if
it happens, it will hurt every one of us," said Defence
Minister Thammarak Israngura in the first such appeal since
separatist violence broke out in the far south 15 months
ago...
'No
sign yet of bomb attacks in Bangkok'
- TNA, April 4, 2005
...The explosions at the airport, a hotel and a department
store in the southern town of Hat Yai were clearly the work
of the BRN Co-ordinate, a separatist movement operating
in Thailands three southern border provinces, Pol.
Lt. Gen. Proong Boonpadong, a Special Branch police commissioner
told reporters on Monday.
...But the public should not panic as there has been no
indication so far that Bangkok would be a targeted, Pol.
Lt. Gen. Proong said.
The authorities did not plan to disable mobile phone services
within airports, he said...
Also: Govt
agrees to step up security measures to 'APEC-level'
- TNA, April 4, 2005
The Thai government has agreed to beef up security measures
at the country's all airports, railways stations, bus terminals
and other major public places to a highest international
standard level equivalent to those in place during the kingdom's
host of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Meetings two
years ago (APEC 2003), according
to Deputy Prime Minister and Interior Minister Pol. Gen.
Chidchai Vanasatidya.
SONGKHLA
BOMBINGS - April 3,
2005
Troubles in the
South index page
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