Abhisit plays down Rohingya terror link

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Abhisit plays down Rohingya terror link

  • Published: 18/06/2009 at 12:00 AM
  • Newspaper section: News

The government is taking a cautious line over connections between three Rohingya arrested this week and reports they helped terrorists and the southern insurgency movement.


Abhisit: More inquiries needed

Police were unsure about the precise links and were conducting more inquiries, Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva said yesterday.

Mohammad Ali Hussein, Mohammad Mudbahem and Chubri Awae were arrested early this week following a joint operation between the Department of Special Investigation, the armed forces and immigration police.

Police said they were human traffickers with ties to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam in Sri Lanka, al-Qaeda terrorists and insurgents in the far South.

See earlier report: PM: They're just bad guys

Mr Abhisit said the men might have made money from human trafficking, without it reaching the separatist movement in the far South.

He also dismissed speculation that al-Qaeda terrorists had slipped into the country to whip up violence in the region.

The government was working with intelligence agencies overseas to make sure that did not happen, the prime minister said.

Several groups were involved in the southern strife and the government knew who they were, he said.

The intelligence unit in the southern border provinces yesterday warned that more illegal Rohingya migrants from Burma would enter southern Thailand.

A group of about 10 Thai senior officials is believed to be involved in the illicit trafficking and each of them makes about a million baht a month, the unit said.

In Yala's Bannang Sata district yesterday, three women government officials were shot and wounded while having lunch at a store 20m away from the district police station. A C-4 bomb was also found in a nearby rubbish bin, apparently targeted at security officers who arrived to examine the shooting scene.

The bomb failed to explode despite four calls being made to its mobile-phone detonator. Later, eight young men were held for questioning. Police said they found traces of gunpowder on them.

Also in Yala, five schools surrounding Ban Pomeng School in Raman district, where a woman teacher was killed on Tuesday, have suspended classes until next week for safety reasons.

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  • Bubba

    Discussion 5 : 18/06/2009 at 09:20 PM5

    Ted, I do not know if you have a beef with Libya or not but if not, I would not get too upset to the point of sounding paranoid. I do not men to irritate you just to say such speculation is kind of more akin to SUN reporting in London than a valid comment here.

    Wombat "there ain't no such animal in" Thailand. Investigative reporting is limited because there are certain "untouchables" and untouchable subjects even.

    One of the problems of any kind of problem solving in Thailand is due to this fact. Journalists, like citizens must act "as if" certain elements did not exist in any way other than as perfect examples of the institutions they represent.

    The military has such a free hand as a consequence of this little real can ever change occur because nobody (and I mean nobody...) can, or even wants to stand up to them.

    The whole thing is like a merry-go-round with common folk standing and watching it go around and around.

    And a real problem is those military top brass responsible for so much breaking up of democracy are convinced they are doing it for the good of the country. They are not villains, just typical top military people with a view they feel has some sort of validity nobody else can understand.

    That is a shame because what the country needs is top military people dedicated just as deeply to democracy and an egalitarian society.

    Most people fear the military and police or, at best dislike them. Except of course those few who occasionally need them to step in and put order in the house again.

  • Wombat

    Discussion 4 : 18/06/2009 at 04:56 PM4

    "A group of about 10 Thai senior officials is believed to be involved in the illicit trafficking and each of them makes about a million baht a month, the unit said."

    Looks like the problem is from within.
    Interesting to see what develops re these 10.
    Come on BP, please investigate.

  • Ted

    Discussion 3 : 18/06/2009 at 03:32 PM3

    Supposedly Qaadafi's son (The Sword of Islam) has been spending time in So. Thailand and shuttling back and forth to the Philippines. Might be just a nice time to visit.

  • Bubba

    Discussion 2 : 18/06/2009 at 12:47 PM2

    Ted discussion # 1: Apparently some early members of the PULO (or New PULO) organization were to have been trained in Libya.

    Now that Libya has returned into the fold of what is considered acceptable civilization I doubt highly it would risk involvement any longer, especially in a small region such as those in southern thailand.

    But the previous link of a few radicalized extremists in the south to Libya are purported to have been strong...

    There are also possible links to Syria but if that is true or not is moot. The US is so intent (was) to link Syria with "terrorism" of all sorts it may be a fabrication.

    As suggested though, the link to Libya was pretty solid.

    Some of the PULO leaders are apparently on wanted lists in bot Thailand and Malaysia.

  • Ted

    Discussion 1 : 18/06/2009 at 09:06 AM1

    Could there be a Qaadafi terror link, one that goes back to the 70's or 80's?

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