How will this attack impact the stalled
peace process in southern Thailand?
Current speculation links the incident to either the Malay-Muslim militants
or to a new collaboration between the Malay-Muslim liberation movement and the
Red Shirts, an anti-establishment force affiliated with the ousted prime
minister Thaksin Shinawatra. But there are several reasons why the Koh Samui
car bomb is more likely to be a military attack by the Malay-Muslim liberation
movement.
The modus operandi of this attack is in line with similar attacks by
southern separatists. According to the police investigation, the car used to
make the bomb was stolen from Yala’s Yaha district. Yala, Pattani, Narathiwat
and four predominantly-Muslim districts in Songkhla are hotbeds of violent
conflict, which has claimed more than 6200 lives since 2004. This is not the
first time that the southern separatists have planted a car bomb outside their
traditional theatre of operation. The Thai authorities do not formally count
the commercial district of Hat Yai in Songkhla as part of the conflict zone,
but for several years the area has witnessed a number of major coordinated
bombings.
Previous bombings linked to the southern militants have several similarities
to what happened in Koh Samui. Since 2004, there have been 44 car bomb incidents
in Thailand’s four southernmost provinces. The first car bomb attack outside the insurgents’
traditional area of operation took place on 22 December 2013. On
that day, attacks involving motorcycle and car bombs hit Songkhla’s Sadao
district, injuring 27 people. Shortly after, a second car bomb was found on the
resort island of Phuket, but the police defused it in time. The incident in Koh
Samui could be another attempt to sabotage an area of economic significance,
which is known to be one of the militants’ strategies.
So how can this violence be stopped?
A peace process is the best means to bring about long-lasting and durable
peace in southern Thailand. In February 2013, the then Yingluck Shinawatra
government initiated the first formalised peace dialogue with the Barisan
Revolusi Nasional (National Revolutionary Front in English, or BRN),
facilitated by Kuala Lumpur. The talks stalled in the wake of growing
anti-government protests in Bangkok before making much progress. In December
2013, the BRN remarked that any further dialogue could only occur after the
Thai parliament endorsed its five demands
and declared the process was a ‘national agenda’. It was an open secret that
the military was not fully on board with the peace dialogue at that time.
The May 2014 military coup left the prospect of peace talks in limbo. Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha’s announcement in
December 2014 gives life to this process again. He stated during his official
visit to Malaysia in December 2014 that his government was ready to resume the
Kuala Lumpur-facilitated peace dialogue. But both the political context and the
government negotiators have completely changed.
A major sticking point now is that the BRN leadership strongly insists that
their five demands are accepted ‘in principle’ — including a call for Bangkok
to recognise the ‘sovereign rights’ of Patani people over the Patani land, and
a demand that the peace talks are formally recognised as a ‘national agenda’.
While the BRN leadership’s current position is to shun the Kuala
Lumpur-facilitated peace dialogue, there are some individuals inside the
movement who want to give the military government a chance. These individuals
have worked with other liberation groups — including all three factions of the
Patani United Liberation Organisation (PULO), Islamic Liberation Front of
Patani (BIPP) and Patani Islamic Mujahideen Movement (GMIP) — to form a loose
umbrella group called Majlis Syura Patani (Patani Consultative
Council, MARA). MARA seeks to represent the diverse interests of the militants
in the dialogue.
While these organisations have limited, if any, military operations on the
ground, they have been working actively on political campaigns, particularly in
the international arena. At present, the BRN leadership does not endorse this
initiative but, according to a source close to the BRN, it may do so if it
proves to be successful. It is natural for any liberation movement to have
hardliners and moderates. That is exactly why a peace process is needed to
encourage all parties to find a common ground.
The protracted armed conflict in southern Thailand needs a political
solution, not a military one. As the liberation movements are sceptical about
the military government’s willingness to give concessions, some separatists
prefer to see the dialogue resumed under a democratic atmosphere. Solving the
southern conflict is therefore intertwined with the larger movement for
democracy in Thailand. When Thailand is likely to have a democratically-elected
government again, however, is anybody’s guess.
Rungrawee Chalermsripinyorat
is a PhD candidate at the Australian National University. She formerly worked
for the International Crisis Group.
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