Shock and Awe in Pattani
Muslims Under Attack in Thailand

 

2004

The smell of blood hung over the Krue Se mosque... Its historic brick walls were 
marred by hundreds of bullet holes. Its marble floors were gouged where 
rocket-propelled grenades exploded. A torn, bloodstained Koran lay salvaged in the 
courtyard� Muslim rebels chose to die Wednesday in a hail of lead and shrapnel rather 
than surrender to police� To many, the dead were heroes.1 - Richard C. Paddock, Los 
Angeles Times

Thai forces guard the bodies of slain Muslims 


In the aftermath of September 11 and the Bali bombings of October 2002, Southeast Asia 
came into focus as a �second front� in the war against international terrorism. The 
arrests of dozens of suspected Al-Qaeda operatives in Singapore, Malaysia, and the 
Philippines, as well as the presence of groups such as the Jemaah Islamiah (JI), Abu 
Sayyaf, Laskar Jihad, and the Kumpulan Mujahideen Malaysia (KMM) signaled to US 
strategists and policymakers that militant Islam had made significant headway into 
that part of the world.2

In February 2002, an FBI report called Malaysia a �primary operational launch pad� for 
the September 11 attacks, and some US analysts drew comparisons between the 
Philippine�s Abu Sayyaf and the Taliban in Afghanistan3. Exaggerations and rhetoric 
aside, Southeast Asia is definitely a region of deep-seated historical grievances and 
simmering ethno-religious animosities that manifest in sporadic outbursts of extreme 
violence between Muslims and non-Muslims.

Recent weeks saw two bloody clashes involving Muslims in Southeast Asia. After two 
years of relative calm, violence exploded once again between Muslims and Christians in 
Ambon, the administrative center of Indonesia�s Moluccas islands. Tens were killed and 
hundreds injured, with buildings, homes and places of worship destroyed by rioters and 
rival militias.

During the same week, 108 Muslims were slain by police in Thailand�s southern province 
of Pattani. Thai officials claim that the youth attacked several police stations and 
checkpoints in an attempt to steal firearms. However, regional police commander Prung 
Boonpadung pointed out that most of the dead were teenagers. Sources also pointed out 
that the young Islamist were armed only with machetes and a few guns.4

Alerted in advance of the attack, Thai security forces gunned down tens of the 
Islamists. Facing almost certain defeat at the hands of heavily armed police, the 
young rebels retreated to a 16th century mosque, one of the holiest Islamic sites in 
Thailand.5 Police surrounded the mosque and called on the Islamists to surrender. When 
they refused, Thai forces fired hundreds of bullets and grenades into the mosque. The 
assault left the mosque awash in blood and left none of the Islamists alive.

---------------------------------

The Thai assault left the mosque awash in blood and left none of the Islamists alive. 

---------------------------------


In an attempt to preserve Thailand�s normal image as a peaceful tourist destination, 
Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra dismissed the Islamist attack as the work of 
local gangs. Tourism is Thailand�s primary source of income, with 11 million visitors 
every year.6 However, a Pattanese separatist group issued a call to arms to Muslims 
living in the south of Thailand, where an insurgency has been waged sporadically for 
four decades. statement. The statement, posted on the Pattani United Liberation 
Organization (PULO) website, called for a Muslim uprising and warned foreigners to 
stay away from Thailand�s top tourist destinations. �We are calling all of you to rise 
up against the Siamese (Thais),� the PULO statement read, describing the government�s 
treatment of Muslims as �terrorism.�7

The Historical Roots of Conflict

Thailand is a predominantly Buddhist nation of around 60 million people. Almost 10% of 
the population is Muslims, living mostly in the five southern provinces bordering 
Malaysia.8 Most Muslims in southern Thailand are ethnic Malay who speak a dialect 
known as Yawi. They constitute a majority in the three southern provinces of Yala, 
Pattani and Songkhla. Although there is no precise date for the introduction of Islam 
to Thailand, it is evident that Southeast Asia�s initial contact with Islam was 
through Arab traders in the region as early as the 8th century AD.9

Eventually, Arab and Persian pioneers settled in Thailand, setting up businesses, 
taking local wives and bringing up their children according to the principles of 
Shari�ah law. In time, they were joined by their Indian coreligionists, and by the 
latter half of the 10th century there was an established Muslim community in 
Thailand.10 Between the 12th and 15th centuries Islam spread extensively, with large 
numbers of people converting, including the King of Pattani, who declared an �Islamic 
kingdom� in 1457.11

A Pattanese Muslim holds a bloodied religious book


The subsequent Islamization of Pattani replaced many elements of the Hindu-Buddhist 
culture, and the Muslim religious elite came to dominate the kingdom�s sociopolitical 
system. However, the Muslim dynasty was abolished in 1786 when Pattani was conquered 
by the Kingdom of Siam. Under Siamese rule, Muslim provinces were governed by 
Siamese-appointed bureaucrats working under a centralized administrative structure. 
Muslim rebellions in opposition to Siam�s administrative �reforms� were suppressed. 
The subsequent Anglo-Siamese Treaty of 1909 guaranteed Siam�s undisputed control over 
Pattani, following which the Siamese government took various measures aimed at 
weakening the Islamic identity of the Pattanese to develop a mono-ethnic, Buddhist, 
Thai state.12

Under Siamese rule, the local governors of the Muslim-majority provinces were replaced 
by Thai rulers. In addition, an act was passed in 1921 forcing Muslims to attend 
Siamese schools to receive a secular education. As a result, Islamic schools were 
closed and the power of Muslim scholars was greatly undermined.

During World War II, the Thai military regime of Pibul Songkhram initiated a series of 
policies aimed at the forcible assimilation of Muslims. The wearing of western-style 
trousers was made compulsory for men, and Muslims were prevented from adopting Muslim 
names or using the Malay dialect. In addition, Shari�ah law was set aside in favor of 
the Thai Buddhist laws of marriage and inheritance.13

Such policies generated a great deal of resentment among the Muslim population of 
Thailand. Consequently, Haji Sulong, the president of the Islamic Religious Council, 
submitted a seven-point list of demands to the Thai government, calling for an end to 
the government�s discriminatory policies. The Thai government responded by arresting 
Haji Sulong and his associates and charging them with treason.

---------------------------------

Muslims constitute 10% of the population of Thailand. 

---------------------------------


By the end of World War II the Thai state had militarily subdued the Pattani 
separatist movement.14 In the initial post-war period, the government tried to adopt a 
more conciliatory stance towards Muslims in the south. But centuries of 
marginalization and suppression at the hands of Thai officials, state penetration of 
Muslim civil society and the absence of Pattanese political participation contributed 
to mutual antagonism between both sides. This antagonism erupted on April 28, 1948, in 
a pivotal event known as the Dusun Nyiur incident - a violent clash between Thai 
police and Pattanese Muslims that left an estimated 1,100 Muslims and 30 policemen 
killed and set the stage for the rise of more militant Muslim separatist groups.15

The Dynamics of Muslim Separatism

Modern Islamic insurgent movements in southern Thailand, the southern Philippines and 
Aceh arguably represent the most visible signs of armed separatism in Southeast Asia 
today. The roots of ethno-religious unrest in each of these regions stem from the same 
basic factors: insensitivity to local concerns, regional neglect, military repression 
and forcible attempts to impose uniformity of language and social behavior on entire 
communities.16

Armed separatist movements in Southeast Asia represent a serious, pervasive and 
notably persistent phenomenon. This is evident in the phenomenon�s duration and 
severity, as well as its resistance to negotiated settlements. For example, the war in 
Mindanao between Muslim separatists and the Philippines government has been ongoing 
for decades, causing some 100,000 casualties and creating over 500,000 refugees. More 
importantly, in all cases of separatism, one can detect the clash between the dominant 
group and its cultural values and the subordinate one with its own religious-cultural 
identification. National identity is invariably defined in terms of �the dominant 
group�s values and culture, with other groups on the periphery tending to be left 
out.�17

Heavily armed Thai forces at Krue Se mosque 


The Pattanese rebellion in southern Thailand in the post-World War II period is the 
case of a Muslim Malay minority, with its distinct culture, traditions, history and 
language, trying to break free from the vestiges of a dominant Buddhist Thai culture. 
The heavy-handed and often insensitive attempts by central authorities to impose 
Thai-Buddhist culture on the Muslims have resulted in Pattanese resentment and a fear 
of losing their own identity to the Thai, perceived as foreigners or intruders.18 
Additionally, the underdeveloped nature of southern Thailand relative to the rest of 
the country has contributed greatly to Muslim feelings of deprivation and 
marginalization. In fact, Muslim provinces account for only 1.5% of Thailand�s gross 
domestic product. The south has virtually no industry, the infrastructure is abysmal 
and tourism is underdeveloped despite extensive natural beauty.19

Two principal militant groups remain active in southern Thailand: PULO and New PULO. 
Both organizations operate independently and have been largely unwilling to coordinate 
their activities due to differences in their strategic outlooks. However, the two 
groups managed to coordinate a series of attacks (codenamed �Falling Leaves�) aimed at 
killing state workers, government officials, law enforcement personnel and attacking 
symbols of Thai Buddhist repression. Between August 1997 and January 1998, no less 
than 33 separate attacks were carried out as part of this shared effort, resulting in 
nine deaths, several dozen injuries, and considerable economic damage.

---------------------------------

Muslims were prevented from adopting Muslim names or using the Malay dialect. 

---------------------------------


PULO is the largest and most prominent of the Malay Muslim groups in southern 
Thailand, operating since the 1960s. The group was established in 1968 by Kabir Abdul 
Rahman - an Islamic scholar disillusioned by the ineffectuality of the established 
Malay opposition in Pattani. His group brought together �a younger, more militant 
generation of Thai Muslims many of whom had been radicalized while studying overseas - 
becoming an active insurgency with the politicization of Malay students in the mid- to 
late 1970s.�20

PULO�s insurgent activities are carried out by the movement�s armed wing, the Pattani 
United Liberation Army (PULA), which directs the majority of its attacks against Thai 
government buildings and cultural and educational facilities in the south. New PULO 
emerged as a dissident faction of PULO in 1995. The group has pursued the goal of 
Pattanese self-autonomy, albeit �through less dramatic but more consistent actions 
than its parent organization.�21

Conclusions

The most recent episode of carnage against Muslims in Pattani will doubtless have 
significant internal repercussions. The Thai government has thus far failed to realize 
that heavy-handed security-based approaches end up radicalizing oppressed communities 
and increasing popular support for resistance groups. The US invasion of Afghanistan 
and Iraq and the continuing presence of foreign troops in many Muslim societies have 
already worked to radicalize the Muslim community in Thailand and increase their 
awareness of global Muslim grievances.

This increased awareness contributed to the Pattanese perception that Thai oppression 
against them is part and parcel of a global campaign aimed at suppressing Muslims 
worldwide.22 Last year, reports indicated that the US was seeking to establish a 
military base in Thailand to help government forces combat Muslim separatists.23 If 
the US eventually takes an active role in suppressing Muslims in the south, the global 
confrontation between Muslims and the US will definitely widen. Moreover, the 
crackdown on Pattanese Muslims may also have an impact throughout Southeast Asia due 
to the multiple ideological and logistical linkages between Muslim separatists 
operating in the region.

Given recent US war crimes in Iraq and America�s insistence on militarily confronting 
Islamist groups throughout the world, Al-Qaeda�s ideology will definitely become more 
prevalent among oppressed Muslims worldwide. As Jason Burke noted in a recent Foreign 
Policy article: �al-Qaeda is more lethal as an ideology than as an organization. 
�al-Qaedaism� will continue to attract supporters in the years to come - whether Osama 
Bin Laden is around to lead them or not.�24



==================================================
"And what is wrong with you that you fight not in the Cause of Allah, and for those 
weak, ill-treated and oppressed among men, women, and children, whose cry is: "Our 
Lord! Rescue us from this town whose people are oppressors; and raise for us from You 
one who will protect, and raise for us from You one who will help." (The Quran 4:75)
                
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