Militants strike in Muslim Thai south
The attacks, which left the teachers and their daughter in critical condition and undergoing emergency surgery, followed an apology for past hardline government policies from Prime Minister Surayud Chulanont, who went to the region to deliver it.
They also came a day after prosecutors dropped charges against 92 Muslims involved in a 2004 protest in the region which led to 78 Muslims dying in army custody and fanned the flames of antagonism when the government refused to apologize.
All Saturday's attacks were in the same district of Yala, one of three provinces near the Malaysian border where more than 1,700 people have been killed since a renewed insurgency erupted in January 2004.
Schools and teachers have been a frequent target as symbols of the government of the overwhelmingly Buddhist country in far away Bangkok and many teachers have been issued guns.
Police said the four schools in four villages were set ablaze during the night. At least one was destroyed completely.
Hours later, the teacher couple and their daughter were heading for the town of Bannang Sata on a motorcycle when they were attacked in the Malay-speaking region which was an Islamic sultanate until annexed by Thailand a century ago.
"Four militants riding on two motorcycles shot the couple and their daughter while they were on their way to take their daughter for special tutoring in town," a police officer said.
"The father shot back and wounded one of them, but they all fled the scene," he said.
Influential Muslims in the region say the apology for the hardline policies of Thaksin Shinawatra, ousted as prime minister in a bloodless coup on Sept. 19, was most welcome but unlikely to lead to a swift peace.
There has been no response from militant groups, who have never claimed responsibility for any of the violence or set out their aims.
Reference : http://www.tehrantimes.com
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home