Rantburg

Today's Front Page   View All of Thu 04/25/2024 View Wed 04/24/2024 View Tue 04/23/2024 View Mon 04/22/2024 View Sun 04/21/2024 View Sat 04/20/2024 View Fri 04/19/2024
2020-08-16 Southeast Asia
Four shot dead by security forces in Pattani
Follow up to this story from yesterday.
[BankokPost] Four suspected forces of Evil were rubbed out in shootouts on Friday night and yesterday morning as security forces closed in on a fifth suspect.

The first clash followed an earlier shootout in which three soldiers were maimed while security forces were hunting for the perpetrators of a bombing that killed a ranger on Thursday.

Two more gunnies were rubbed out and weapons seized in Yarang district of Pattani on Saturday morning as coppers resumed the operation to arrest the suspects.

Earlier in the day, residents were evacuated to a safe area amid reports the suspects were heavily armed, said Maj Gen Pramote Prom-in, front man for the Region 4 Forward Command of the Internal Security Operations Command (Isoc).

Maj Gen Kriangkrai Srirak, deputy director of the Region 4 Forward Command, travelled to Yarang district yesterday morning to monitor the situation as the shootout carried on.

Maj Gen Pramote identified the men rubbed out on Friday as Masukee Sarumor, believed to be the head of the Runda Kumpulan Kecil (RKK)
...in English "Small Patrol Units”, the 500-strong south Thailand jihadi commandos are an ultra-violent offshoot of the Salafi Barisan Revolusi Nasional-Koordinasi (BRN-C), the largest group in the south Thailand Islamist jihad. Trained in Bandung, Indonesia and retreating to safe havens in Malaysia, they’ve been causing trouble — mostly kabooms — for two decades...
turban movement, who was wanted on two arrest warrants in security-related cases; and Anwar Kolae, an operational member, who was also wanted. The identities of the two men shot yesterday are still being verified.

Benar News has more on yesterday’s story:
Thai Deep South: Suspected Insurgents Slain During Manhunt for Bombers

Two suspected holy warriors were killed and three soldiers were maimed as security officers who were hunting for the perpetrators of twin deadly bombings the day before exchanged gunfire with an gang in Thailand’s Deep South, authorities said.

The clash took place in Yarang, a district of Pattani province, a day after kabooms killed two soldiers and injured three others as security details escorted students and teachers to school for the start of the academic year in Pattani and neighboring Narathiwat province.

Maj. Gen. Pramote Prom-in, front man for the army’s regional command, said officers killed a pair of separatist rebels.

"The two men who were killed are the leaders of the operation, but we will need to confirm their identities after the autopsies," Pramote said.

Police Col. Thotsaphol Sarapruek, chief of the Ban Sarong cop shoppe in Yarang district, said officials initially believed the group was involved in Thursday’s bombings.

"[T]he group opened fired first as they tried to escape. After a shootout of more than 30 minutes, three military officers were maimed and were taken to the Yala Center Hospital, Thotsaphol said, adding that the officers searched the holy warriors’ shelter and confiscated survival items.

However,
death is not the end. There remains the litigation over the estate...
a military officer who was not authorized to speak to news hounds told BenarNews that the suspects in Thursday’s bombings were elsewhere.

Although rebel attacks that target security escorts for schoolchildren and teachers are common in Thailand’s troubled southern border region, Thursday’s twin bombings took place as campuses opened for in-person instruction for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic broke out here.

The chief of the Duyong cop shoppe in Pattani said the first attack occurred shortly after 8 a.m. as a dozen soldiers assigned to Company 4305 were patrolling a road leading to Pakaluesong primary school. One soldier was killed.

About 30 minutes later, a squad assigned Company 4508, in Ra-ngae, a district in Narathiwat, came under a similar attack that killed one soldier and injured three others.

"The attacks in Pattani and Narathiwat are linked with an effort to make them happen at the same time, different cells but they were set off by holy warriors who wanted to disrupt the peace," said police Lt. Gen. Ronasilp Poosara, the commander of Region 9 Police Bureau.

Since the National Revolutionary Front (BRN), the largest of the armed separatist groups in the Deep South, declared a unilateral ceasefire in early April to allow officials to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic, at least 33 attacks have occurred in the border region.

These have resulted in the deaths of at least 19 people, including five bad boys. As many as 52 people have been injured in those incidents, according to information compiled by BenarNews from police reports.

In 2004, Malay-speaking rebels in the Moslem-majority provinces of Pattani, Yala, Narathiwat and four districts in Songkhla province reignited an insurgency against Thai security forces and soft targets over their demand for an independent state. More than 7,000 people have been killed since then, according to Deep South Watch, a local think-tank.
Posted by trailing wife 2020-08-16 00:42|| || Front Page|| [13 views ]  Top
 File under: Thai Insurgency 

00:11 Skidmark









Paypal:
Google
Search WWW Search rantburg.com