Six killed in Thai south days after rebel demands rejected

Four gunmen on motorcycles 'sprayed shop with bullets’ in Pattani province

Thai police at  a grocer’s shop where six people were shot dead by suspected Muslim militants in the southern province of Pattani yesterday. Photograph: Surapan Boonthanom/Reuters
Thai police at a grocer’s shop where six people were shot dead by suspected Muslim militants in the southern province of Pattani yesterday. Photograph: Surapan Boonthanom/Reuters

Suspected Muslim insurgents shot dead six people, including a three-year-old boy, in a convenience store in southern Thailand, police said, just two days after peace talks in Malaysia aimed at ending violence in the area ended in deadlock.

The attack was mounted yesterday when four gunmen on motorcycles pulled up at the store in Pattani province, just 500 metres from a military checkpoint. Five of the victims were Buddhists and one was Muslim.

“The attackers sprayed the shop with bullets before going in to finish off their victims. They left a note saying ‘revenge for the innocent’ before fleeing the scene,” a police officer in Pattani told Reuters, asking not to be identified.

Emergency meeting

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Prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra called an emergency meeting with security agencies to discuss the violence.

The killings came just two days after a second round of peace talks in the Malaysian capital, Kuala Lumpur, brokered by Malaysia, between Thai officials and leaders of the Barisan Revolusi Nasional, one of the oldest rebel groups operating in the south of the country.

Yesterday the Thai military, which has 60,000 troops stationed in the south of the country, rejected key BRN demands.

Resistance to Buddhist rule in the predominantly Muslim provinces of Yala, Pattani and Narathiwat has existed for decades, but resurfaced violently in January 2004. Since then, more than 5,300 people have been killed.

The three provinces were once part of a Malay Muslim sultanate until annexed by Thailand in 1909.

About 80 per cent of the 1.8 million people living in the south are Malay-speaking Muslims. Many regard Buddhist rule from Bangkok and heavy military presence in the south as oppressive.

Reuters