Thai PM Tells Islamic Conf. Official To Read Koran
Friday, 21 October 2005
Article: Richard S. Ehrlich
BANGKOK, Thailand — Thailand's Buddhist prime minister angrily told the Saudi Arabian-based Organization of Islamic Conference to "read the Koran" before criticizing his military crackdown in the south, where more than 1,000 people have died in the worst Islamist insurgency outside Iraq.
"I would like him to read the Koran which stated clearly that all Muslims, regardless where they live, must respect the law of that land," Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra said on Thursday (Oct. 20), in remarks aimed at OIC Secretary-General Prof. Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu.
"This means the Koran wants Muslims to live peacefully with people of other religions," Thaksin said, referring to Islam's sacred text which believers regard as God's revelations.
Thaksin has been struggling to contain the rapidly escalating violence in southern Thailand, where most of this Southeast Asian nation's minority Muslims live.
"All Thai people are tired of the violence and want to see peace. I will do every by all means to end the violence," Thaksin said.
"Such criticisms contained in the Muslim organization's communique is considered most inappropriate."
The prime minister's blast, during his weekly news conference, came after Ihsanoglu announced on Tuesday (Oct. 18) that the OIC was deeply concerned "about continued acts of violence in southern Thailand against Muslims, claiming the lives of innocent civilians, and inflicting harm on properties."
Ihsanoglu's official OIC statement, issued in Jeddah, did not mention the killing of Buddhists.
Hundreds of Buddhist civilians — including businessmen, commuters, plantation workers and clergy — have died alongside Muslim civilians in the south, in addition to mostly Buddhist troops and Muslim insurgents.
"Some villages have been under siege, and some families had to migrate," the OIC said, referring to 131 Muslims who recently fled from Narathiwat province across the border into Muslim-majority Malaysia.
Malaysia has since criticized Thailand over the plight of the 131 fearful Muslims, causing relations between Kuala Lumpur and Bangkok to rapidly deteriorate in recent days.
Bangkok must "reach a peaceful settlement of the legitimate demands of the Muslim Thai citizens in southern Thailand," and allow them to "manage their local affairs through participation guaranteed by the Thai constitution, within the framework of respect for territorial integrity of Thailand," the OIC's Ihsanoglu said.
The violence in Thailand's southern provinces of Narathiwat, Pattani and Yala has left more than 1,000 people dead since January 2004 when suspected Islamist insurgents burnt down 21 schools, raided a military base, killed several people and escaped with hundreds of weapons.
The self-styled "mujahideen" demand an end to perceived persecution and discrimination by Bangkok, and a separate homeland in the south.
In the latest shock attack, suspected Islamists assaulted a Buddhist temple in Pattani province on Oct. 17, killed a monk and two boys who lived at the temple, and escaped.
"We will definitely retaliate," Thaksin vowed the next day.
Bombings, assassinations, arson attacks and other assaults erupt in the south on virtually a daily basis.
The military was stunned on Sept. 21 when Muslim insurgents escaped after torturing to death two Thai marines by beating and stabbing their bound-and-gagged victims behind a human shield of defiantly anti-government Muslim women and children.
The killing of the two military men in Tanyong Limo village, Narathiwat province, horrified the government and plunged southern Thailand into a fresh security crisis.
"If I could, I would drop napalm bombs all over that village," a distraught Captain Traikwan Krairiksh was quoted in the Bangkok Post as saying after he viewed the two bodies of his former subordinates in a pool of blood.
"But the fact is, I can never do that. We are soldiers. We must follow the law. We can only take revenge by using the law," Capt. Traikwan said.
In July, Bangkok clamped the south under a "state of emergency" which includes controversial Article 17, granting impunity to security forces so they cannot be prosecuted for killings or other acts while deployed.
Richard S. Ehrlich, a freelance journalist who has reported news from Asia for the past 27 years, is co-author of the non-fiction book, "HELLO MY BIG BIG HONEY!" — Love Letters to Bangkok Bar Girls and Their Revealing Interviews. His web page is http://www.geocities.com/asia_correspondent/ |
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Tuesday, 12 July, 2005 Learning to live with Thai violence By Simon Montlake
in Narathiwat, Thailand
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At a dusty store on the outskirts of Narathiwat city in southern Thailand, a group of colleagues meet for their morning commute.
A year ago they would have travelled separately to the rural primary school in Baan Jut Deang, where they teach.
Now they ride their motorbikes and cars in a convoy, followed by an army pickup truck. Four soldiers armed with automatic rifles sit in the back, alert for any danger.
It is a short drive, but nobody is taking any chances after the recent upsurge of violence in Thailand's troubled south.
More than 700 people have been killed in the predominantly Muslim region during the last 18 months, in unrest that government officials blame on Islamic separatists, though criminal motives may also be at work.
Twenty-four of the dead have been teachers - apparently singled out because they are symbols of government control and the Buddhist majority. School buildings have also been targeted, and dozens have been fire-bombed since the violence escalated in January 2004.
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The latest killing, which sparked national outrage, was the murder of a female school director in Narathiwat province
Kobkul Runsaewa, aged 47, was shot dead in June while travelling home by motorbike to prepare lunch for her elderly mother.
Pairach Sangthong, a senior education official in Narathiwat province, says teachers are being targeted because of their status and vulnerability.
"Teachers are government workers and an easy target because they stay in local communities close to the villages," he said.
The violence against teachers has prompted thousands to apply for transfers to other provinces, and education authorities are struggling to fill vacancies.
The situation has grown so bad that the Thai government last week offered to help teachers buy handguns and provide bullet-proof vests for those who requested them.
Razor wire
Their morning commute safely over, the teachers at Baan Jut Deang prepare for their daily classes at their wooden, one-storey school.
The children, who live in nearby Muslim villages, raise the Thai flag and sing the national anthem in the school's sun-baked playground.
It looks like a tranquil rural scene — except for the razor-wire around the school perimeter, and the squad of armed soldiers patrolling the grounds.
The army moved in last December to guard the school and use its facilities for skills training and rural development.
It is part of a general "hearts and minds" campaign designed to win over Muslim communities distrustful of the central government's authority.
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School principal Tanakorn Saengtarung says he has reservations about the idea of arming teachers, as well as the presence of soldiers.
"There's a conflict in my mind. I'm a teacher and I'm carrying a gun? It saddens me just to think about it," he said.
But sports teacher Garonpan, who did not want his family name used, insisted that it was a logical step to defend against insurgent attacks.
"It's necessary for teachers to defend themselves, we don't know who the enemy is, so I think it's good," he said.
Most of the school's 183 children were too shy to talk to a foreign visitor.
But there was little hint of trauma in their boisterous games, nor any sense of hostility towards the Buddhist teaching staff.
During breaks, some boys ran over to the army camp and played with the soldiers, who responded with smiles and jokes.
"The children in this area think that soldiers are exciting.
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The kids like to play with the soldiers," said Tanakorn Saengtarung.
Most of the teachers at Baan Jut Deang said they had lived in the area for many years and would not be driven out by violence.
"I'm not afraid. I've been here for 17 years. I feel that the local people will protect me," said Panidal Nantamatwangnara.
But Garonpan, who has applied for a transfer to his hometown in north-east Thailand, said the conflict was unsettling everyone at the school.
"It's hard to concentrate on teaching the children, everyone is too jumpy. Though we do need to give them knowledge, they are the next generation," he said.
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Wednesday, 22 December, 2004 Eyewitness: Thai media intimidation
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As violence continues to sweep southern Thailand, journalists are also suffering, says the BBC's Nualnoi Thammasathien, who writes here of the intimidation she has met with as a result of her reports.
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They did not discuss any of my reports in detail, nor did they elaborate on the weaknesses or faults in them. I found it absurd for someone to criticise another's work without giving a shred of evidence.
But they did give their audience some information about my background, saying that after I had worked as a reporter in the country for some time, I 'fled the country', apparently for no particular reason.
They even mentioned, casually: 'Well, we do quite understand it really. Since she took the money from the outsiders she has to do it.'
This was a serious accusation, since for many people,taking money from outsiders in order to act in an unpatriotic fashion is tantamount to a crime against the nation.
Arranging a protest
The presenters invited their audience to write to and call the BBC to complain about me and my reports. They gave out what they thought were the BBC's telephone numbers, but apparently they got them wrong.
They also criticised human rights activists, the UN and those senators who have tried to investigate the Takbai incident.
Then the presenters and the listeners who called into the programme discussed how to arrange a protest against any representative of the UN who would want to visit Thailand to investigate the incident.
The tone of the programme sounded very extreme. It reminded me of the atmosphere leading up to the massacre of student activists at Thammasat University in October 1976, when soldiers killed 300 students whom they thought were a communist threat.
And, to my horror, the presenters also stated clearly to their listeners that I was in fact staying in the country "at this moment"'.
To me, that was a clear case of intimidation.
But many other reporters are also in a difficult position. Some have responded with self-censorship, for example by suddenly switching their focus from the suffering of Thai Muslims to the suffering of Thai Buddhists, or by simply burying reports well within the inside pages.
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Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra has also reportedly threatened to have anyone disseminating the video footage of the detention of 1,300 Muslim protesters on the day of the Takbai incident arrested.
Some of those who have seen the video say it contains brutal and humiliating scenes of the security forces handling the detainees.
A number of people tried to organise a public showing of the video, but were told by the authorities to cancel their plans. An opposition politician, Thanin Jaisamut, who has done so, has been called in for questioning by the police.
Thai officials insist the video has been manipulated to make it appear that the soldiers brutally suppressed the protesters — and that is why the authorities have had to ban it.
Changing attitudes
But banning the video is only part of a wider attempt to stop the public from searching for the truth.
On the very day of the Takbai incident, a senior army commander in charge of the operation to disperse the protest told local reporters that they needed to keep the news among themselves.
As a result of all this, Muslims in the south are gaining a new kind of image.
"They [southern Muslims] deserve to die," a taxi driver in Bangkok told me. "They're the ones who do the routine hit and run killing and then hide behind their sarongs."
I have heard many other members of the Thai public express similar views.
Such hardening attitudes will certainly play into the hands of extremists like those who singled out my name in their radio programme.
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AFP October 27, 2004
International groups decried the "unapologetically aggressive and belligerent approach" taken by security forces who broke up a violent protest Monday in the country's troubled south.
Some 1,300 detainees were left piled on top of each other in trucks for at least six hours after the demonstration was broken up leaving 78 dead, mainly from suffocation but also several with broken necks.
Premier Thaksin Shinawatra on Wednesday announced an inquiry into the deaths in the trucks but it was not clear who would sit on the inquiry team and how it would be run.
"It's most important there are very thorough, independent judicial and legislative inquiries," said Nick Cheesman, project officer of the Hong Kong-based Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC).
Rights activists have accused Thaksin's government of abuses over the last two years including a war on drugs that left more than 2,500 people dead, a raid on a mosque in April that killed 32 lightly armed rebels and other hardline tactics in the south.
The AHRC called Monday's deaths at Tak Bai in Thailand's Muslim-majority Narathiwat province "most disturbing and utterly inexcusable".
"Their deaths speak to the total absence of professional behaviour and rudimentary respect for human lives on the part of those leading and carrying out this operation," it said.
"Not only the south, but the whole country must now face the bloody consequences of an unapologetically aggressive and belligerent approach to legitimate human rights concerns held by growing numbers of people there."
Amnesty International said Monday's deaths were part of a "disturbing pattern" of excessive force against Muslims in southern Thailand where an insurgency has raged for decades.
Thai senator Kaewsan Atipho demanded a thorough explanation from the government as to why dozens of Thai men died in transport from Tak Bai.
"If the fact was that people had their hands tied behind their backs and were piled into trucks it was the fault of the government, and the government has to give their families justice," he said.
He also called on authorities to immediately release the remaining 1,200 detainees or give them lawyers and allow them to meet relatives if charges would be pressed against them. They can be held for up to seven days under martial law.
Thailand's human rights commission was to send its own four-person fact-finding mission to Narathiwat this week and submit a letter of complaint on Wednesday to Thaksin.
In its letter, the commission rapped Thaksin, saying "the use of force was excessive, and someone should be held responsible," commissioner Saneh Jamarik told reporters.
In a blunt assessment he laid the blame for the southern unrest, which has now left at least 414 people dead this year, squarely on Thaksin's government.
"We have analysed and found that the key problem is government policy. We have proposed advice in previous letters but the government was not interested in our opinions," Saneh said.
He ranked the incident on a par with the brutal April 28 raid on the Krue Se mosque in Pattani province when security forces shot dead 32 lightly armed suspected Muslim militants.
A fact-finding commission concluded that troops were too heavy-handed when they stormed the mosque on a day when 108 militants and five security forces were killed in the south.
The army commander who ordered the mosque assault, General Pallop Pinmanee, resigned over the controversial raid, but Thaksin stopped short of acknowledging any wrongdoing by Pallop.
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Thursday, 25 August 2005 Thai MPs pass tough south decree
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The Thai lower house of parliament has endorsed a decree which gives the prime minister emergency powers to handle the insurgency in the south.
Although the bill was passed by a large majority, many opposition members said the measures violated human rights.
The Senate is now due to vote on the decree on Friday.
It permits media censorship, detention without trial and immunity for law enforcement officials who kill suspects during the course of their duties.
Meanwhile Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra has held his first weekly press meeting, responding to complaints that he is hostile to the media.
BBC correspondent Jonathan Head, who watched the briefing, said Mr Thaksin looked confident as he fielded questions on the many thorny issues now confronting his government.
'Not a licence to kill'
There was little doubt the emergency decree would pass, because the prime minister's Thai Rak Thai party has a large parliamentary majority.
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But human rights organisations, opposition groups, and even the government-appointed National Reconciliation Commission for the south, have already expressed grave doubts about some of the measures it includes.
"We cannot agree with the decree as it is not the way to bring back peace to the community," opposition leader Abhisit Vejjajiva told the French news agency AFP.
But Mr Thaksin insisted the new powers were not "a licence to kill", but a tool needed to combat the increasing unrest in the south of the country.
"The separatist ideology remains, and the violence will be prolonged because authorities need time to tackle this complicated problem," Mr Thaksin is quoted as saying.
The decree was passed by the Thai cabinet last month, without judicial approval, after a series of co-ordinated attacks in the southern city of Yala.
It has already come into force in three southern provinces.
More than 800 people have died in the southern unrest since January 2004.
No-one is sure who is responsible for the violence, but analysts say it is fuelled by disenchantment within the Islamic community in the south.
Meeting the media
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Well-known for his sensitivity to criticism, Mr Thaksin has often been accused of trying to control the media in Thailand.
But at the first of what he promises will be weekly meetings, Mr Thaksin looked relaxed at Thursday's press event, our correspondent says.
Careful briefing by his advisors did not stop some characteristically quixotic answers creeping in, though, our correspondent says.
He asked the media not to judge the insurgency in the south by the rising number of killings there — and insisted the situation was improving.
But the prime minister's most surprising response was to a question he did not like, our correspondent says.
In the past he has sometimes lost his temper and made ill-considered remarks in front of the cameras, but in Thursday's meeting, he merely held up a small sign marked with a black cross, and pressed a buzzer to show his disapproval.
He said it was an idea he said his son had borrowed from a Japanese game show.
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The Dark Side Initiates — Click here Dark path initiates depend on the denial The five-percent manipulator class is composed of those on the dark path |
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Unspeakable grief and horror
...and the circus of deception killing continues...
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