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Jihadist activity, as well as retaliation to it, is increasing in Thailand. From the Taipei Times, with thanks to Filtrat:
Tension escalated between Thailand's Buddhist majority and its Muslim minority yesterday as the country's defense minister warned of a bloody war between the two communities.Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra traveled to Pattani province in the heart of the Muslim-majority deep south in an attempt to head off a rising tide of violence.
In the latest of a series of attacks, two Muslim men were shot dead by unknown gunmen in separate incidents Sunday night in Yala province, 770km south of Bangkok.
Police said the motive of the killings was unclear but they suspected they might be part of a continuing effort to destabilize the region.
On Sunday the Islamic Central Committee of Thailand, along with Muslim leaders in the southern provinces of Yala, Pattani and Narathiwat, announced they were suspending cooperation with central government authorities because of "disgraceful" behavior by Thai soldiers. The Muslim leaders objected to a search of a local ponoh Muslim school in Pattani by about 70 soldiers who were looking for weapons stolen in a raid on a Thai army camp on Jan. 4.
Reacting to Muslim leaders' announcement, Defense Minister Thammarak Issarangkura said the government would not tolerate any kind of rebellion in the south.
Speaking in a radio interview in Bangkok, Thammarak compared the Muslim militancy in the south to the communist insurgency that was widespread in the area in the 1970s.
"During that time, many people died," he said. "Do we want that situation to happen again? The rest of the country won't let the people of these three provinces disrupt the lives of all 59 million people in Thailand. If there's war, a lot of people will be killed in those three provinces."
Like so many judges and officials in the West who have lectured Islamic radicals about their own faith, Thammarak took the rebels to task for violating the tenets of Islam. This widespread behavior is both presumptuous and short-sighted. It fails to recognize that Muslims aren't going to care what a non-Muslim tells them about Islam, and refuses to acknowledge the potency of the religious appeals that radical Muslims are making within the Islamic community worldwide:
Thammarak criticized the Muslim leaders for violating their own religion and the principles of the Koran."Their god does not teach this kind of thing," he said.
Police, soldiers, teachers and Buddhist monks have been the targets of shooting and bombing attacks in the past three months, mainly in the five southernmost, Muslim-majority provinces.
Government leaders have attempted to play down the attacks as being the result of local conflicts and banditry. But the rising number of attacks, combined with intelligence reports of Islamic separatist involvement, have forced him to take a more active role in easing tensions.
Thaksin had been scheduled to return to Bangkok yesterday from Phuket but instead traveled to Pattani.
He said he planned to go to Narathiwat later in the day and attempt to meet with local Muslim leaders.
Posted by Robert at February 11, 2004 8:14 AM
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I think it's a terrible thing that the majority Buddhist population is reacting badly in Thailand. I mean, of course one would react emotionally to the slaying of holy men like bhikkhus, (Buddhist monks) but retaliatory violence and reactionary legislation are the aims of the "terrorists".
I believe that many impressionable Muslims nowadays have a persecution complex that can be manipulated by extremists. Look at the Zionist conspiracy theories. If the majority Buddhist population is seen as oppressive, the young jihadists will do their violence, and more and more militant Islamist policies and attitudes will be manifested.
I identify strongly with this conflict, as I am a Theravada Buddhist who has considered going to Thailand and being ordained as a monk.
Posted by: Brendan W at February 12, 2004 6:53 PMI don't see how the Buddists are "behaving badly". How do we know if these two muslims were not responsible for killing many? We don't -the article doesn't say, but I'm willing to place my bet that the Buddists didn't kill indiscriminately. It gets tiring to hear about the perpetrators being treated as victims -and vice versa. How much propaganda will we accept from these Muslim terrorists in each and every conflict? It's time to put the blame where it belongs. In each conflict throughout the world, the muslims are responsible for the violence and murder. I've never heard or read in history - of the peaceful Buddists being violent! Just maybe they've had enough of the terrorists and murderers! And I salute them. Unfortunately,sometimes one must fight in order to survive.
Posted by: Sue at February 14, 2004 7:59 AM

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