Hope this is within the discussion parameters.  I find it interesting
because it shows the willingness of officials to alter stands on gun control
given circumstances.  If as many claim RKBA is a human/natural right, and
thus a basis for constitutional protection, this example of reversion to
principle is an odd, but useful case study.

Does anyone know what the laws and/or policies on RKBA are in Thailand?  Is
this a huge exception?

--guy--

-----

Thailand Lets Teachers Carry Guns in Restive South
Wed Apr 28, 4:09 AM ET  Add Oddly Enough - Reuters to My Yahoo!

BANGKOK (Reuters) - Thailand _gave teachers_ in its troubled Muslim south
permission Tuesday to _carry guns in classrooms_ to help allay safety fears
sparked by a four-month spate of attacks on schools and public buildings.

More than 60 people have been killed and scores of public buildings attacked
in the restive area since January, when unidentified gunmen stormed an army
barracks, killing four soldiers and stealing hundreds of assault rifles.

Along with police and security installations, schools have been a favorite
target of arsonists, forcing teachers and students to flee to schools as far
as away as Bangkok, more than 1,300 km (800 miles) away.

Schools, which teach in Thai, are easy targets in the mainly-Malay speaking
region since they are often located in remote hilly areas.

Defense officials said troops would now provide security at all schools in
the three provinces bordering Malaysia, although Interior Minister Bhokin
Bhalakula also allowed teachers to arm themselves.

"I've ordered all three provincial governors to respond to requests by civil
servants, including teachers, for pistol-carrying permits promptly because
they need them for self-defense," Bhokin told reporters.

Southern Thailand's new school year is due to start on May 3, but many
teachers have asked for the term to be delayed because they are too scared
to go back to work.

The violence in the region, home to a low-key separatist rebellion in the
1970s and 1980s, shows few signs of abating despite an army and police
clampdown against what officials say are mainly disgruntled and disaffected
local youths.

A bomb hidden in a shoebox and rigged to a mobile phone blew up a police
booth in Yala province Tuesday, just as explosives experts were preparing to
defuse it, police said. There were no injuries.

Bangkok says the problem is crime-related and domestic, stemming from a
sense of alienation among impoverished Malay-speaking Thais who have few
emotional links to the distant capital of the predominantly Buddhist nation.

However, independent analysts fear international militant groups, such as
Osama bin Laden (news - web sites)'s al Qaeda network, might find fertile
recruiting ground among the region's disaffected Muslims.



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