Coverage of insurgency in Thailand’s Malay-speaking
provinces shows fight far from fair when only one side has microphone
For
some weeks, the deputy police commissioner of Thailand, Police Gen. Srivara
Ransibrahmanakul, has been making some pretty serious allegations about
terrorist attacks in and around Bangkok.
Last
week, Ransibrahmanakul announced the arrest of three Malay Muslims from the
country’s far South who he said were planning to carry out violent attacks at
six locations popular among tourists in and around the capital.
Although
all those arrested are from a region where a 13-year separatist insurgency has
so far claimed nearly 6,700 lives, mostly local Muslims, the deputy police
commissioner insisted that they were not linked to the insurgency.
According
to security sources, the three have been in detention of the military -- which
has been ruling to country since a 2014 coup -- since October.
They
were rounded up after the first was arrested during a blind sweep that saw
police take in more than 100 Thai Malay youth and students residing in Bangkok
and its vicinity, and then information garnered from the arrest was used to
arrest two more people in the south.
On
learning of the arrests -- and that some detainees said they were beaten in
custody -- the Barisan Revolusi Nasional (BRN), a long-standing separatist organization
that controls the vast majority of the combatants on the ground, set off a bomb
at a food stall in downtown Pattani -- one of the three provinces affected by
the insurgency.
The
Oct. 24 explosion killed one person and injured 18 other people.
It
is still not clear as to why deputy commissioner Ransibrahmanakul decided to
announce the arrest of the trio. He has provided little information other than
to say that they were out “to create disturbances”.
Ransibrahmanakul
has given no explanation as to what organizations the three suspects hailed
from, much less their motive, ideology or the methodology behind the planned
attacks.
With
the trio still in custody -- and little evidence or accusation being presented
to back up the arrest -- there is also little to back up any case for their
defense.
In
the absence of an identifiable spokesman for the separatist militants, the
narrative about what conflict and insurgency aim to achieve in the southernmost
border provinces is pretty much left to the Thai side to construct.
Since
the violence began, just about every incident in the far South has been
attributed to the militants, even if the killing was personal in nature. With
compensation offered to those aggrieved by insurgency, there has long been a
financial motive to tie even the most obvious criminal acts to the insurgents.
Monetary
compensation is a tool all too often used by security officials when they abuse
their power.
In
August 2014, an army-trained paramilitary ranger unit shot dead a 14-year-old
Malay Muslim boy riding his motorbike in Narathiwat provinces’s Sri Sakorn
district, claiming self defense. After the local community acted with uproar,
an extensive police investigation concluded that the handgun was planted on the
boy to fabricate evidence.
The
army compensated the victim’s family with 500,000 baht ($15,400), but no
disciplinary action was taken against the ranger.
Similarly,
in October 2014, the military was forced to apologize to a Malay Muslim family
in Narathiwat’s Bacho district after a Royal Thai Marine opened fire on their
pickup truck traveling on a backroad, killing a ten-year-old girl and wounding
the parents.
They
were transporting coconuts to a nearby fresh market. The troops said they
thought they were transporting insurgents. The local Marine commander issued an
apology and compensation was paid but the amount was not made public.
With
one side holding a microphone, while there is a genuine absence of an
identifiable spokesman for the BRN and the organic, decentralized structure of
the insurgent cells, it makes it extremely difficult for researchers and
journalists to verify whether specific operations or attacks charged to the
militancy are indeed genuine.
Even
the identity of the membership of the Dewan Pimpinan Parti (DPP), the BRN’s
ruling council, is extremely secretive. The Thai government claims to have a
list of DPP members, but BRN cadres -- even those who have left the group and
have been working with the government since -- say no one knows for sure.
With
the BRN operating an extremely clandestine network, the use of combatants as
moles does not necessary mean one can obtain information about cells, or even
working knowledge of the unit one step up in the movement’s chain of command.
As
one BRN operative noted to Anadolu Agency this week, the cells behind each
attack operate on a need-to-know basis. This means combatants not involved in
an operation, even if the attack is being carried out in their respective area,
will be kept out of the loop to ensure that as little information as possible
is leaked.
When
asked to verify whether separatist militants had carried out the shooting death
of a pregnant lady in Panare district in Pattani on Nov. 26 -- which the
government has claimed was insurgency-related -- the BRN source took two days
to check the line of command and returned to insist that the killing was not
carried out by the BRN.
He
did not, however, rule out a personal dispute as a motive.
The
source was just as dismissive when asked about the planned six bombs in and
around Bangkok that deputy police commissioner Ransibrahmanakul recently
alleged were in preparation.
Sources
in the official security community said many of the country’s top brass were
scratching their heads about Ransibrahmanakul’s claim, speculating if his
statement was part of a counter-intelligence effort aimed at discrediting the
BRN, even though he did say the suspects were not part of the Malay separatist
movement.
After
all, alleging that six tourist sites in and around Bangkok were faced with
attacks is too serious a matter just to toss out without backing up the claim,
they said.
The
statement is not the first Ransibrahmanakul has made in recent months to leave
analysts with puzzled looks on their faces.
One
week prior to the announcement of the attacks, he claimed that Thai Malay
Muslim groups from the Malay-speaking South were providing financial help to
Daesh.
He
then retracted his statement the following day.
Security
officials have suggested to Anadolu Agency that the claim was simply an effort
aimed to rattle insurgents in the far South or the anti-junta camp.
Although
Ransibrahmanakul insisted that the three suspects weren’t part of the
insurgency in the far South, the fact that they came from the region makes it
extremely difficult for observers to think otherwise.
Few
officials have dared to question Ransibrahmanakul given his close personal
connection to the country’s security tsar, Defense Minister Prawit Wongsuwan.
Government officials have often described Ransibrahmanakul as the minister’s
“darling little brother”.
Sources
in the international community in Thailand have said they are not convinced by
Ransibrahmanakul’s claim of the planned attacks on tourist sites, but that does
not necessarily mean that the BRN and other groups have never attacked areas
outside the far South.
It
is extremely rare but does happen from time to time, usually in reaction to
some specific development. These include a December 2013 incident where a twin
bomb was placed on the back of a stolen pickup truck behind a police station in
the southern tourist enclave of Phuket, but the switch was purposefully set to
“off”.
A
BRN source has told Anadolu Agency that the idea was simply to show the Thai
side what the movement was capable of.
The
highly publicized August 2016 attacks in the seven upper provinces of the south
were also attributed to the BRN by some Thai security officials, although an
official explanation is yet to be made.
A
BRN source said the August attacks were not meant to inflict casualties, and
the movement has since concluded that they were counter productive because the
country's ruling junta set the discourse in the aftermath of the attacks around
Thailand’s tourism industry.
The
BRN's intention was to discredit the military for a recently passed referendum
on a draft constitution that has more or less cemented the army’s place in the
country’s politics for the next two decades.
By
Don Pathan
The
author is an associate with Asia Conflict and Security Consulting, Ltd and is
based in Yala, one of Thailand's three southernmost provinces hit by the
current wave of insurgency
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