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Thailand's Southern Insurgency

from THAILAND

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 May 2017

Matthew Wheeler
Affiliation:
South East Asia Analyst at the International Crisis Group
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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The insurgency in southernmost Thailand entered a new phase in 2013 with the 28 February announcement of a peace dialogue between the National Security Council (NSC) and the main militant organization, Barisan Revolusi Nasional Patani Melayu (BRN, Patani-Malay National Revolutionary Front). The dialogue process is Bangkok's most determined and public effort to peacefully resolve the conflict, which is more than a decade old. It has roots in Malay nationalist resistance to Thai rule that stretch back to Siam's conquest of Patani and annexation of the region at the start of the twentieth century. Armed resistance to Thai rule took shape in the early 1960s, as a variety of underground separatist fronts formed and fought a low-level guerrilla campaign for an independent Patani state. This struggle had subsided by the 1990s, but the separatist fronts endured in exile and violence never ceased.

In 2001, and intensifying in 2004, a reconfigured militant movement emerged to wage a campaign of unprecedented potency. Security agencies believe that the Coordinate faction of BRN began quietly preparing for their campaign in the early 1990s, recruiting, indoctrinating and training a new generation of fighters. Today, most rank-and-file insurgents appear to identify themselves simply as “fighters” (juwae) in a national-liberation movement, not as members of BRN or other groups, though the organization has a leadership council in exile in Malaysia. The movement casts its cause as self-determination, a struggle to liberate Patani from Thai rule. Recruitment appeals emphasize a history of Siamese conquest and oppression, and most new recruits swear oaths to keep the movement's secrets on penalty of death. The cause is couched in religious terms as a jihad, but religious justifications are linked to a local Malay ethnic identity; it remains a local insurgency, not part of a transnational jihadist movement.

Violence had been largely confined to the southernmost provinces of Pattani, Narathiwat, and Yala and four southeastern districts of Songkhla: Chana, Na Thawi, Saba Yoi and Thepa. This region of roughly 13,500 square kilometres is home to almost two million Thai citizens. Close to 80 per cent of the population are Muslims who speak Malay as their first language, the remainder almost all Thai or Sino-Thai Buddhists.

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Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute
Print publication year: 2014

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