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BANGKOK, May 23 (Xinhua) -- Violence swept through
the deep South of Thailand throughout the last several days as militants
launched attacks that killed two policeman and dozens of residents.
Meanwhile, two hostage-taking incidents stirred up by local villagers are also sending a warning signal which
further worries the Thai government on the thorny South problem.
Late Tuesday, police issued arrest warrants for 19
more suspects involved in the violence against two teachers taken hostage at a
school in Narathiwat Province last Friday, although seven suspects have already
been arrested and six of them are women.
Fourth Army Area commander Lt-Gen. Ongkorn
Thongprasom said at a press conference on Tuesday that a special unit has been
deployed to provide security at Ban Gujingruepo in Rangae district where the
hostage drama occurred last week.
Gen. Ongkorn, who is also director of the Southern
Border Provinces Peace-building Command (SBPPC), said the SBPPC also conducted
psychological operations in the village.
The hostage drama took place after two men were
arrested by police on suspicion of murder earlier Friday morning. Demanding
their release, angered local villagers took two teachers hostage at the school.
Both the teachers were seriously beaten and one of them, Juling Pengamoon, is
still in a dying coma till Tuesday. Doctors said only miracle can help her life.
Hundreds of sympathizers and well-wishers including
high-ranking military officers visited her in the intensive care unit on
Tuesday. Four guest books have been filled with written messages to give her and
her family moral support.
The south military officials said the incident was
planned in advance, similar to the killing of two Marines taken hostage at
Tanyong Limor village in Narathiwat in September last year.
On Tuesday, villagers in the same province encircled
a group of police and military officials who raided their village in Ba Cho
district and arrested two suspects in connection with the murder of two marines
last year.
After a 15-minute peaceful negotiation, the villagers
freed the border patrol police and officials without any violence. However, it
marked the anti-crackdown emotion which has already gone around among the
southerners.
Besides, bloody attacks launched by southern
insurgents were never calmed down, and two more policemen were killed by
drive-by gunmen on Tuesday in Yala Province.
More and more innocent people including policemen and
soldiers became victims since unrest broke out in January 2004 in the three
mainly Muslim provinces along Thailand's border with Malaysia. The fact that
1,300 people have been killed and thousands others injured in the violence is
really harassing the government which has acted as a caretaker for three months.
Caretaker Deputy Prime Minister and Justice Minister
Chidchai Vanastidya said on Tuesday he would visit the violence-plagued three
provinces of Narathiwat, Pattani and Yala on Wednesday to step up protection for
teachers, as well as local residents and policemen.
Chidchai said that in a cabinet meeting, caretaker
Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra expressed deep concern over the safety of
teachers in the south and accordingly ordered him to follow up and fully
implement the security policy, especially building fences around schools and
teachers' residences to protect them from insurgents' harassment.
"I'll go to follow up what has and has not been done
in securing the teachers' safety," the caretaker deputy prime minister said.
Brushing aside comments that little success has been
achieved despite continued mass operations to gain trust and co-operation from
local residents, Chidchai said the tasks have yet to yield fruitful results in
some areas where local residents don't trust the officials, but in some areas
much progress has been made.
Meanwhile, caretaker Prime Minister Thaksin told
reporters that he himself was arranging a schedule to visit the far south as
well, saying he would go to all areas heavily infiltrated by the insurgency.
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