Attacks in Thailand’s south kill five, wound 13, police say
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Thai police officers inspecting the site of an attack outside the district office of Sungai Kolok in Narathiwat province on March 9.
PHOTO: AFP
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BANGKOK – Five people were killed and more than a dozen others wounded in two attacks in Thailand’s troubled south, police said on March 9.
A low-level conflict has simmered in Thailand’s southernmost provinces since 2004, killing more than 7,000 people, as rebels in the Muslim-majority region battle for greater autonomy.
A group of more than 10 assailants opened fire outside the district office of Sungai Kolok, a town on the Malaysia-Thailand border, at around 7pm on March 8, provincial police said.
They also threw explosives and detonated bombs in an attack that killed two defence volunteers guarding the office and wounded 12 others, including four civilians, Narathiwat province police said.
In a separate attack in the neighbouring province of Pattani on the night of March 8, a roadside bomb killed three people – two local village assistants and a ranger guarding the area.
One person was also wounded in the incident, which occurred at around 11pm in Saiburi district, local police said.
Thailand’s deep south is culturally distinct from the rest of Buddhist-majority Thailand, which took control of the region more than a century ago. The area is heavily policed by Thai security forces.
Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra told reporters on March 9 that the number of security forces in the south working night shifts “would definitely need to increase” in the wake of the attacks. AFP

