Southern Thailand

The situation in three of the four Muslim dominated provinces bordering Malaysia is dire. Over the past three years the provinces of Pattani, Yala and Narathiwat have been going through turbulent times. Since 2004 about 4400 people have been killed.

Looking for a safehouse and an opportunity to study

In September 2007 we wrote:

* Three weeks ago two men aged 71 and 81 were at their home when a Muslim extremist walked in, shot them both, beheaded them and then burnt their bodies.

* Two weeks ago at about 7 am a small patrol of police were guiding Buddhist monks as they collected food as they have done for centuries. A remote controlled bomb went off killing a civilian, a policeman and one of the monks.

* In just one day 22 banks were bombed in Yala.

* A Buddhist couple working as fruit pickers were shot dead, their 3-year-old child injured. The couple was then decapitated.

For very good reason people (especially non-Muslims) are scared to work in the fruit and rubber plantations because they are fearful of being murdered.  In actual fact Thais all over the kingdom are very reluctant to travel down south.

When we made our first exploratory trip there we saw schools that had been torched, mosques where many had been killed and drove past road sites  where there had been murders.

A striking aspect of the South Thailand insurgency is the anonymity of the people behind it and the absence of concrete demands. A number of the militants are reported to have received training at al-Qaeda training camps in Pakistan. This insurgency is not necessarily caused by lack of political representation, nor by poverty or economic problems even though Muslims in the border provinces do have lower levels of educational attainment compared tot heir Buddhist neighbours. One important fact, however, is that in 1902 these three Muslim majority provinces were formally annexed by Thailand. Prior to this they had their own form of self-rule. Clearly the extremists want the return of self-rule.

Another terribly worrying aspect of this is the targeting of school teachers for assassination. Schoolteachers and headmasters are being murdered even though in Thai society they are held in very high regard. To the extremists they are soft targets who, because they are government workers, are considered to be fair game. In some areas, schoolteachers have a bodyguard who daily escorts them to and from school. A number of teachers are now armed.

The government does not know how to handle this situation. How can they? In the worst incident the army rounded up hundreds of young men whom they suspected of being insurgents, tied their hands behind their backs with their shirts and threw them in the back of a truck. They were stacked sardine style six deep in the truck. By the time they reached the army camp five hours later seventy-eight of them had suffocated. Of course this only worked to exacerbate the problem.

Government soldiers are scared and rightfully so. Some 4000 soldiers from north of Bangkok who have been sent to the deep south are now compelled by their very senior army superiors to wear religious amulet/necklaces blessed by a revered Buddhist monk. These amulets, now officially part of their uniforms, are believed to keep them safe from danger. Some soldiers are wearing up to 40 amulets at any one time.

HOW WE CAN PLAY A PART
Late in 2007 we set up a board with a group of southern Thai community leaders to establish a new work amongst children in Thailand’s deep south. The search  been going on for  long time to find the right fit of people to care for young people.

Living in fear

 This new work will probably be based in Hat Yai city located in the province of Songkhla where there is quality schools,  universities and good infrastructure. Songkhla is adjacent to the three Muslim majority provinces that we would source the children from.

We will emphasize caring and protecting children whose parents have been maimed or killed by Muslim attacks in the three Muslim dominated provinces of Pattani, Yala and Narathiwat.
Empower Asia will establish two leadership development homes.

We like cutting edge and we aspire to both pioneer and to be unique. Undoubtedly this work falls into this category.

To the best of our knowledge there is no other similar work like ours aimed at southern kids.

We are currently quietly chatting with a few southern indigenous people who are interested to work with us to set up new homes there. If you would like to know more about the situation in the deep south then click on he followin link from The Diplomat

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