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Brutal insurgency haunts the south
When he heard the loud cracks of gunfire, Prapan Pormapat knew the insurgents had just claimed another victim.
Yala: When he heard the loud cracks of gunfire, Prapan Pormapat knew the insurgents had just claimed another victim.
An engine roared as two gunmen sped away on a motorcycle, leaving behind the body of a saffron-robed Buddhist monk in a pool of blood.
"Everyone here carries a gun now," said Prapan, a Buddhist tailor, recounting the chilling tale of when a shadowy five-year rebellion first struck in this sleepy neighbourhood of Yala in southern Thailand.
"I rarely go out. I'm too scared to travel anywhere. We don't know who is behind this violence, or what they want," he said.
Thailand's Muslim deep south has become the battleground of one of the world's most mysterious conflicts, a brutal insurgency that has claimed nearly 3,500 lives since 2004.
A climate of fear and intimidation has gripped the provinces of Yala, Narathiwat and Pattani, and the 30,000 troops here offer little protection against the near-daily bombings and shootings.
The soldiers sent to crush the insurgency have no idea who they are fighting.
"We don't know where the attacks will come from," said Daeng, an army colonel, nervously huddled behind a wall of barbed wire and sandbags at a checkpoint outside a Muslim village.
"We don't know if these people live in this village, or if they've come here to kill us."
The rubber-rich region bordering Malaysia is one of Thailand's most picturesque, but the unrelenting violence has ensured tourists and investors keep well away.
Attacks on plantation workers have slashed the local rubber output, and would-be investors have declined government offers of soft loans and tax breaks for fear of being targeted.
Security analysts and academics say the insurgency is an independence struggle by Malay Muslims rebelling against 100 years of forced assimilation and Thai Buddhist "oppression."
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