Bangkok Tonight Forum  
BangkokTonight : Massage | Bars | Discos | Night Clubs | Hotels | Escorts | Tips | Maps | Site Map
Search in:  

MainNews & Announcements – 8 Killed in attack on van in Thailand All Topics

Topic Jump
<< Back Next >>
Single Page for this topic
Email a friend |  

 
madfrog
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - Suspected Muslim militants ambushed a commuter van carrying a group of Buddhists and killed eight of them execution-style in Thailand's restive south Wednesday, military and hospital officials said.
The attack prompted officials to step up security in the south, where a Muslim insurgency has claimed more than 2,000 lives since 2004.

Militants attacked the van as it slowed into a curve in the road, which they had blocked with a large tree trunk, said police Lt. Kitti Mankhong, a duty officer in the Yaha district of Yala province, where the attack occurred.

The attackers first threw a bomb at the van, then fired at the driver with automatic rifles, and finally opened the vehicle's side door, shooting each of the passengers, he said.

The driver, who was hospitalized with a gunshot wound to the face, survived the morning attack, as did a female passenger. She was hospitalized in critical condition.

"Everyone was shot in the head at close range, execution-style," Kitti said.

Two of the dead were 16-year-old girls.

The driver recounted that he heard the insurgents say, "Kill them all," in the local dialect of the Malay language that is widely spoken among southern Muslims instead of Thai, according to Yaha district chief Suppanat Sirunthawinet. He also said that one of the Buddhist women pleaded in vain for the life of her daughter.

"Thais have never seen such a cruel incident. A mother was hugging her daughter as they died," Suppanat said.

He quoted the driver saying that the gunmen did not execute him after they heard him praying for his life in the Malay dialect, which indicated he was likely to be Muslim.

The van was shuttling people from the Betong district of Yala province to Hat Yai, the south's major city, in the neighboring province of Songkhla. All of the passengers were identified as Buddhists and the driver was Muslim.

Police and soldiers were searching for the attackers, he said.

Relations between the Muslim and Buddhist communities in the far south have become strained, but there has been little sign of Buddhist civilians seeking to retaliate for the violence that is often directed at civilians.

Later Wednesday, a bomb exploded outside a mosque in the same district, wounding 11 Muslims, police said. An army spokesman, Col. Akara Thiprot, blamed insurgents.

"They want to trick people into believing that this is retaliation," he said, referring to the earlier killings of the Buddhists. "They want to cause divisiveness between people of different religions."

He said the village where the bombing took place was one of the few in the area that didn't cooperate with the insurgents, who otherwise have a strong influence there.

Police Col. Apirat Sangkhao said another bomb exploded at a tea shop in Yaha, killing one and injuring several others.

No one has claimed responsibility for either bomb.

The attacks came as authorities beefed up security for the Tuesday anniversary of the founding of the Barisan Revolusi Nasional, or National Revolution Front separatist group. Police had warned that insurgents might try to mark the anniversary with violence.

The BRN was formed in 1963, partly in opposition to the Thai government's policy at the time of forcing southern Muslims to assimilate into predominantly Buddhist Thai society. The government later changed the policy.

Military officials believed that BRN-Coordinate, a BRN offshoot, has played a vital role in the current violence.

Gen. Montree Sangkhatrap, head of Thailand's Internal Security Operation Command, said heightened security measures would be in effect through March 22. He did not elaborate.

"Certain groups of people have plans to actively instigate violence during this period," he said.

Drive-by shootings and bombings occur almost daily in Thailand's three Muslim-majority provinces—Yala, Narathiwat and Pattani.

Violence has increased since a military-installed government took power in September following a coup that ousted then-Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra.

Police, soldiers and Muslims viewed as collaborators with the government, along with Buddhist civilians, are targeted by the insurgents.

Source : http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D8NS5KJO0&show_article=1





Thai Girls : Meet Sexy Thai Girls
Posted on: 5:36 pm on Mar. 14, 2007
DaffyDuck

Quote: from madfrog on 7:18 am on Mar. 15, 2007

but there has been little sign of Buddhist civilians seeking to retaliate for the violence that is often directed at civilians.
Maybe there oughth to be...

What an utterly heinous act of slaughtering innocent and uninvolved people and children. Religion of peace --- my ass!


Quote: from madfrog on 7:18 am on Mar. 15, 2007
Later Wednesday, a bomb exploded outside a mosque in the same district, wounding 11 Muslims, police said. An army spokesman, Col. Akara Thiprot, blamed insurgents.
Seems about par for the course for Muslim insurgents - they mostly kill their own people...


Bangkok Women : Meet Sensual Bangkok Women
Posted on: 2:09 am on Mar. 15, 2007
shamas
The cold blooded killing of civilians especially children can not be tolerated.

Terrorists like this are the low life scum of the world, no guts, no balls and no respect.

How can anyone live with themselves knowing they killed 16 year old girls in cold blood. It makes me sick just thinking about it.

Shamas O'D


Thai Girls : Meet Sexy Thai Girls
Posted on: 8:57 pm on Mar. 16, 2007
Sarge
There is an article on The Sunday Times (UK) about this latest atrocity, it makes harrowing reading. I just wanna highlight one or two passages:

"The coup leaders continue to ask the wrong questions and refuse to take the conflict for what it is — an Islamic insurgency,” said Professor Zachary Abuza of Simmons College, Boston, the leading foreign expert on the struggle. “Many Thais think it’s only about poverty and social justice,” he added.

Abuza says that two well established separatist groups, the National Revolutionary Front and the Pattani Islamic Mujaheddin Movement, are the prime movers."


....and quite worryingly for tourists too:

".....Perhaps the greatest mystery is why the militants have stayed on their home ground, refraining from attacks on Thailand’s multi-billion-pound tourist industry.

In an ominous development, however, military intelligence officers recently disclosed that they had picked up two surveillance teams of suspected extremists in Bangkok and Phuket within the past 18 months."



Read the full article HERE


Sarge


Bangkok Girls : Meet Sexy Bangkok Girls
Posted on: 4:00 am on Mar. 25, 2007
DaffyDuck

Quote: from Sarge on 5:41 pm on Mar. 25, 2007

".....Perhaps the greatest mystery is why the militants have stayed on their home ground, refraining from attacks on Thailand’s multi-billion-pound tourist industry. "
Maybe because they are barely smart enough to realize that if they deal a major blow to Thailand's tourist industry, the repercussions are potentially extremely fatal to them (albeit I suspect with the competence of the current gov't it would take 2-3 blows dealt in Bangkok or other major tourist centers).

Still, I have no doubt that it will happen, and it won't be pretty.



Thai Women : Meet Matured Thai Women
Posted on: 9:05 am on Mar. 25, 2007
     

Single Page for this topic

© 2001-2019 bangkok2night.com | Our Privacy Statement

Powered by Ikonboard 2.1.10
© 2001 Ikonboard.com