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Tip Sent 108 Thai Rebels to Deaths

Police and troops were lying in wait when the Islamic raiders attacked. The ensuing clashes and casualties underscore growing unrest in south.

THE WORLD

April 29, 2004|Richard C. Paddock, Times Staff Writer

PATTANI, Thailand — After battling authorities for months, the Islamic militants needed guns, so they planned a daring raid. Armed mainly with machetes, they would launch simultaneous attacks on police stations across southern Thailand, killing as many officers as they could.

Unknown to the extremists, however, someone in their group had tipped off the police. When the rebels attacked 12 police stations at dawn Wednesday, police and soldiers were lying in wait and gunned them down. By the end of the day, 108 fighters were dead, most of them teenagers.

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Thai security forces, which recently suffered dozens of casualties at the hands of the extremists, did not hold back. When 30 of the fighters took refuge in a mosque, the troops fired tear gas, bullets and grenades into the building, killing every rebel inside.

The militants' death toll made Wednesday one of the bloodiest days in modern Thai history. It also highlighted the extent of a growing rebellion in the south by Muslims who believe that they are mistreated by the nation's Buddhist majority.

Seventeen militants were arrested during the day's fighting, which also left three police officers and two soldiers dead.

Authorities defended their response to the rebel assault. "They came to attack, so the police and soldiers just defended themselves," said Interior Ministry Permanent Secretary Siwa Saengmanee.

Some now worry that the rebel death toll may increase hatred of the government among Thailand's Muslims, who live mainly in the south and make up about 5% of the population.

But Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra told reporters in Bangkok, the capital, that the fighters' deaths would help bring an end to a rebellion that had festered for decades in the southern provinces.

Under Thaksin, Thailand has played down the growing rebellion and the presence of international terrorists -- in part to avoid scaring off tourists and investors. But now, it will be difficult for this Southeast Asian nation to escape comparisons with two other countries in the region, Indonesia and the Philippines, where Muslim fighters have engaged in bloody clashes with Christians or government forces.

For years, Thailand has been a way station for terrorists connected with the Al Qaeda network and its regional affiliate, Jemaah Islamiah, authorities say. They say at least two initial meetings to plan the October 2002 bombings in Bali, Indonesia, were held in Thailand. Last year, Hambali, allegedly a top figure in Al Qaeda, was arrested in central Thailand. Authorities also broke up what they said was a plot by Muslims in southern Thailand to bomb popular tourist destinations in the country.

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