E-MAIL THIS LINK
To: 

Thai terrorists separatists to continue fight
A secretive armed group engaged in the bloody separatist jihad conflict in southern Thailand has told Al Jazeera that it will not compromise on seeking independence for the largely Muslim area. Speaking to Al Jazeera's Step Vaessen at a location outside Thailand, a senior member of the National Revolutionary Front Co-ordinate (BRN-C) said the group's main aim was "to fight for independence through an armed revolution".

"Our main aim is not war but we are forced into this because without violence Siam [Thailand] will never stop discriminating against the Malay people in the south," he said on condition of anonymity.

More than 3,500 people have been killed in the conflict since simmering tensions over rule by Buddhist-majority Thailand flared in 2004. Despite some 30,000 Thai troops being deployed in the region, the shootings, grenade attacks and car bombings happen almost daily, with 90 per cent of those killed being civilians. Muslims who work as teachers or in other positions seen as being too close to the government have also been targeted – in some recent cases the victims have been beheaded or burned alive, rights groups say.

"We have three kinds of enemies," the senior BRN-C fighter told Al Jazeera. "Siam and its allies - and another enemy who we don't really know but they are people who obstruct our revolution. So we need to make them aware that as Muslims they should be on our side."

Another BRN-C field commander who admitted being responsible for many of the attacks over the last few years, told Al Jazeera that the group had cells in villages across the south that were so secretive even members did not know each others' identities. At a secret meeting in Narathiwat province he told our correspondent that the group was prepared to fight until its last breath to free Muslims from what he called the colonisation of the Thai south.

In an interview with Al Jazeera Thailand's prime minister, Abhisit Vejjajiva, said his government was working to address "past injustices and grievances" as the way to move forward in the region. "My government has made it a clear policy that the key to peace in the south is justice," he said.

"It may be the aim [of the insurgency to demand a separate state], but my government will prove that the people living in the five provinces are treated fairly, that they will have opportunities, and that they are valued by the Thai government." But,with little progress so far, support for the separatist movement has been growing.

The Thai army believes the BRN-C has 5,000 armed fighters and bomb-makers, along with some 50,000 supporters. The group is believed to recruit mainly from madrassas or religious schools in the south, where opposition to Bangkok's rule has been fuelled in recent years by the often harsh tactics employed by the Thai army.

"These provinces are all Muslim areas but they are under Thai rule, so what people are fighting for are their rights. Now they don't have rights," Ali Sekan, a religious teacher, told Al Jazeera.
Posted by: ryuge 2009-02-26
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=263573