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Southeast Asia
Clashes in Thailand's Muslim south leave at least 127 dead
2004-04-28
PATTANI, Thailand: Clashes between security forces and suspected Muslim rebels in southern Thailand left at least 127 dead in the bloodiest day in the history of the troubled region, officials said. The authorities said police and soldiers battled armed groups who launched coordinated dawn attacks at 10 police stations and security checkpoints in the provinces of Yala, Pattani and Songkhla near the Malaysian border. Officials said the attackers were mostly teenagers, poorly armed with only machetes and a few guns. Television footage showed their dead bodies being lifted from pools of blood and thrown unceremoniously into trucks.
Taking out the trash.

The last battlezone was at a mosque outside Pattani provincial town, where between 32 and 38 rebels who had holed up there after fleeing security forces were killed when troops stormed the building to end a six-hour standoff.
"Well, I counted 32 bodies, but we seem to have some extra arms and legs. I'll get back to you later."

Smoke billowed from the heavily-damaged brick mosque as police and internal security officials examined the scene. Elsewhere in Pattani, armoured personnel carriers patrolled the streets and helicopters hovered overhead.
Major Chitnart Bunnothok, spokesman for the Fourth Army which patrols the troubled region, said before the mosque raid that 93 attackers had been killed, 12 were injured and one was arrested. Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra said only two security personnel were killed and that the toll was low because police and army were well prepared and the attackers were only lightly armed.
Thai Army gets extra points for marksmanship, Operational Security and intel work. Well done.

The attacks were the latest in a series of bombings, raids and murders in Thailand's southern provinces, which over the past four months have claimed the lives of some 65 security forces, government officials and Buddhist monks.
Deputy Director of the Internal Security Command, General Panlop Pinmanee, said it was "absolutely certain" Wednesday's raids were mounted by separatists and that they were trained by militant groups operating in the south.
Saw another report and a photo that said the attackers had brand new Motorcycles of Doom. Should not be too hard to trace where they got them.

He said security officials were braced for an attack after an upsurge in separatist incidents in neighbouring Narathiwat province last week which were staged as a bid to divert authorities' attention.
That would be the arson attacks on 50 schools, government offices, etc. The Thai police grabbed a whole bunch of suspects, I'd wager some of them talked.

Thaksin said the raiders were attempting to steal weapons, and that he believed they were linked to a group which carried out a January 4 raid on an army depot, killing four soldiers and making off with hundreds of rifles. "The purpose of the raid was to steal weapons from government security forces which would then have been sold," he said.
You steal weapons to use, either to steal more weapons with, or to be tucked away for future use.

The premier did not contradict Panlop's assertion that separatists were to blame, but downplayed the sectarian nature of the trouble, saying that the militia responsible was made up of both Thai Muslims and Buddhists.
Have you checked to see if the Buddhists had converted to Islam?

A separatist movement raged in the region until the 1980s when a government campaign largely ended the movement, but trouble flared again in recent years, sparking fears militants had been mobilised by foreign terror groups.
Islamic leaders said they feared Wednesday's unprecedented violence, and the high death toll among the young rebels, would spark a major deterioration in the south where resentment of central authority already runs high. "I am really concerned that the problems in the south will escalate even further," said Abdul Rosue Aree, deputy chairman of the Islamic Council in Narathiwat.
"The incident will definitely affect Muslim people's feelings. They will have bad feelings towards authorities and the turmoil will continue, it will not be resolved," he said.
"This problem would be solved if the infidel police would just stand still and let us hack them to death....say, is this mike still on?"
Posted by:Steve

#4  nevermind, the links changed!
Posted by: CobraCommander   2004-04-29 7:23:05 AM  

#3  Click on link for video of the scene
Posted by: CobraCommander   2004-04-29 7:21:34 AM  

#2  Over 9,000 virgins for 127 dead Jihadi. The count is mounting.
Posted by: BigEd   2004-04-28 6:16:48 PM  

#1  Who is this one guy who was arrested? Methinks he's the one that tipped them off.
Posted by: BruceBruce   2004-04-28 1:47:01 PM  

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