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BANGKOK: Thailand’s new government will consider granting some
degree of self-rule to Muslim-majority provinces hit by bloody
separatist unrest, Interior Minister Chalerm Yubamrung said Tuesday.
More than 2,900 people have died in the
southern provinces along the Malaysian border since separatist
violence erupted four years ago.
The violence has become increasingly deadly
over the last year, despite repeated olive branches offered by the
previous military government.
In the latest unrest, a 40-year-old Buddhist
man was shot and set ablaze in Pattani province late Monday, while
three others were shot dead in nearby provinces early Tuesday,
police said.
“I want to reaffirm that autonomy is
possible, but we will have to discuss what type of autonomy it would
be,” Chalerm told reporters. “We cannot afford to allow so many
deadly bombings. We must take measures to improve the situation and
not just wait to be killed.”
He said that Thailand would consider China’s
westernmost Xinjiang region, which is autonomous and predominantly
Muslim, as a possible model. But unlike his predecessors, he would
not make frequent trips to the Muslim south, saying such trips only
spark more violence.
“Militants retaliate fiercely when a senior
government minister visits the region,” he said.
Chalerm also indicated that intelligence
agencies continued to believe militants could seek to expand their
activities and possibly stage bomb attacks in the southern
commercial center of Hat Yai or even in Bangkok.
He said nightclubs in the southern region are
particularly at risk, because militants see them as an affront to
Islam.
Chalerm said he would ask local officials to
consider new restrictions on nightlife.
The region was an autonomous Malay Muslim
sultanate until mainly Buddhist Thailand annexed it in 1902,
provoking decades of tension.

-- AFP
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