A Long History of Injustice Ignored: The Muslims of Southern Thailand
Posted Nov 2, 2005

The Killings in Southern Thailand

By Farish A. Noor - 2004

The killing of more than a hundred young Thai Muslims by Thai security forces over the past few days have sent shockwaves across the ASEAN region. Though ASEAN officials have been busy trying to mend the torn faade of stability and peace in the region, it is clear that things are far from normal in the Southern provinces of Patani, Yala and Satun in southern Thailand.

Thus far the international community has been relatively quiet about the killings and violence in Southern Thailand. The Thai government now designated as a major non-NATO ally in the so-called 疑War Against Terror by the Bush administration Җ knows very well that it can literally get away with murder under the present climate of fear and anxiety in the region. The Thais simply have to look to their distant neighbours in Pakistan to see that any government that rides along on the anti-terrorђ bandwagon can get away with practically anything.

President Musharrafs dealing with the so-called ґterror supporters and sympathisers in the tribal region of Waziristan in the northern tribal belt has set a precedent for many other Asian leaders to follow. Now ThailandҒs Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra (who has declared his intention to be the new Mahathir of ASEANђ) is simply following the model set by other pro-American leaders like Musharraf of Pakistan, Megawati of Indonesia and Aroyyo of the Philippines.


Dirty, Convoluted History

But Thailands troubles in the Southern provinces go back to its own past and the imperial legacy of the Thai kingdom. Though Thailand was and remains a predominantly Buddhist country, it should be remembered that the people of Thailand are culturally diverse and that the Thai community happens to be just one of many ethnic groups in present-day Thailand. In the south, the population has always been predominantly Malay and history will show that the Malays of the South have had a history and identity of their own.

The Malays of Southern Thailand are concentrated in the provinces of Patani, Yala, Satun and Narathiwat. These provinces were all part of what was known as Patani Raya (Greater Patani), which covered the domain of the earlier Sultanate of Patani, which was itself derived from the ancient kingdom of Langkasuka (mentioned in the Chinese texts as Lang-Ya-Hsiu).

Since the 18th century, successive Thai rulers have sought to subjugate these Malay states and bring them within the domain of the Siamese empire. In 1901 the Thai ruler King Chulalongkorn broke the peace treaty with the Malay states and launched a military campaign against them. His centralisation programme (thesaphiban) regrouped the seven provinces of Patani under one unit called the Boriween chet huamuang (Area of the Seven Provinces). Siamese administrators were appointed by the King to rule the Malay provinces directly from the royal capital of Krungtheep (Bangkok). In 1906 the seven Malay provinces were brought closer together under a single administrative unit called Monthon Patani. It was only in 1909 that the Malay kingdoms of Kelantan, Trengganu, Kedah and Perlis were taken over by the British colonial power with the signing of the Anglo-Siamese treaty. Despite the division created by the Anglo-Siamese treaty, the Malay kingdoms of Patani were similar to their mainland counterparts in every respect: Patani society was Islamic and Malay in character. They shared the same language, political culture, social structures, customs and values. Cross-border contact between the kingdoms remained high, despite various attempts by the British and Siamese to police the boundary between them.(1)

It should not come as a surprise to anyone that the Malays of Greater Patani resented having to live under the yoke of Thai imperial dominance. Soon enough the Malays of Southern Thailand rose in revolt: Patani resistance to Siamese hegemony began almost as soon as Bangkok tried to re-establish its grip on the Malay kingdoms. In 1903 the Patani Malay aristocrat Tengku Abdul Kadir Qamaruddin revolted against Bangkok. He was defeated and imprisoned for nearly three years as a result. As soon as he was released he planned another insurrection against Siamese rule. The Patani Malays were angry with Bangkok for trying to impose Thai laws on them and BangkokҒs refusal to recognise traditional Malay and Islamic laws in the region. After another failed revolt in 1915, Tengku Abdul Kadir Qamaruddin retreated to Kelantan (which was under British indirect rule) and attempted to regroup his forces with the help of the Sultan of Kelantan, Sultan Muhammad IV.

In 1922, Tengku Abdul Kadir launched his biggest campaign against the Siamese government, in response to the new education policy introduced by Bangkok which made it compulsory for all Patani Malays to attend Thai government schools and learn the Siamese language. Tengku Abdul Kadir regarded this as a deliberate and calculated attempt to erase Patani-Malay identity and to convert the Patani Malays to Buddhism.(2) But Tengku Abdul Kadirs rebellion ended in failure and a number of prominent Malay rulers were either killed or captured. Despite the fact that they managed to defeat the insurgents, the Thai government realised that it needed to revise its own policy towards the Patani Malays. King Vajiravudh introduced new guidelines in order to help assimilate the Patani Malays into the local administrative structure in the region, in order to give them a sense of commitment and investment in Thai policies. In time, Bangkok began to offer limited concessions to the local Malay rulers, and attempted to co-opt them into the administrative framework of the Patani government.


From Conquest to Co-optation

Due in part to the geo-political realities of the time, the lot of the Patani Malays was not about to improve. British colonial rule in Malaya meant that an entente cordial had been struck between the kingdom of Thailand and Britain Җ both of which were imperial powers, it should be noted. The British were prepared to turn a blind eye to the developments in Southern Thailand as long as the Thai government recognised the borders of British Malaya that had been set by the Anglo-Thai treaty.

Throughout the 20th century successive Thai governments and rulers have sought to co-opt and pacify the Patani-Malay communities of Southern Thailand by the use of financial inducements as well as the threat of force and violence. More often than not, these policies were directed towards the goals of assimilation and absorption of the Malay community into the Thai-Buddhist mainstream.

Prior to the Second World War Thailand experienced a change of political leadership which led to the rise of General Phibun Songkhram. General Phibun was an extreme right-wing nationalist who was very much influenced by the neo-fascist and ultra-nationalist ideas of Nazi Germany and Japan at the time. Under his rule, Thai society was forced to undergo many radical changes to its political system and social values. In 1939 General Phibuns government introduced the Thai Ratthaniyom (Thai Customs Decree) which forced all Thai citizens to conform to a set of common cultural norms and which forced all minority groups to follow the model set by the government. This caused considerable outrage in the Malay provinces of Patani, and the Patani Malays regarded it as yet another attempt to erase their cultural and religious identity.

Under General PhibunҒs decree Patani Malays were not allowed to dress according to their Malay customs, were forced to use the Thai language, and in some cases even forced to participate in the public worship of Buddhist idols.(3) Phibuns policy led to an immediate response from the Patani Malays who rebelled against the government. But the governmentҒs response was equally harsh: the army was used to quell the rebellion, leading to the arrest and killing of many Patani leaders. Thousands of Patani Malays fled south to join their fellow Malays in Malaya.

During the post-war years the southern regions became the hotbed of militant anti-state and communist activities, and by the 1970s was the hideout of the Malaysian Communist Party (MCP) that had been forced to go underground. Southern Thailand also became the base for a number of Malay separatist groups such as the Barisan Nasional Pembebasan Patani (BNPP- National Liberation Front of Patani) (4), Pertubuhan Perpaduan Pembebasan Patani (PULO- Patani United Liberation Organisation) (5) and the the Barisan Revolusi Nasional (BRN- National Revolutionary Front) (6).

Between 1968 to 1975 the Thai government launched a series of military operations in the south that were aimed at destroying the networks of Patani liberation movements and underground organisations. Operation Ramkamhaengђ and the Special Anti-Terrorist Campaignђ that lasted nearly seven years resulted in 385 violent armed clashes between Thai security forces and Patani militant groups. A total of 1,208 detentions and arrests were made, while 329 Patani fighters were killed. 250 militia camps were destroyed and 1,451 weapons were captured. But despite the scale of the counter-insurgency programmes and operations, the Patani region remained tense. In December 1975 Thai security forces killed five Patani youths, leading to the largest anti-government rallies in the history of the region that were carried out in front of the Patani central mosque. To complicate matters even further, the killing of the Patani youths sparked off protests by Malays in the neighbouring state of Kelantan as well, and prompted the leader of the Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS), Asri Muda, to raise the matter in the Malaysian Parliament.


Islamisation and Radicalisation of Patani Resistance Groups

In the wake of the Iranian revolution of 1979, the Patani resistance movements in Southern Thailand also experienced a shift towards a more radical Islamist register. While some of the more secularђ Patani liberation movements like BRN and PULO would gradually pale into insignificance (the BRN and PULO offices in Saudi Arabia were practically inoperative by the mid-1980s), other movements like the BNPP would move closer to the global current of Islamist radicalism. In 1979 the BNPP upgraded its military training programme and expanded the scope of its guerrilla activities against Thai security forces in the region. In 1985 the more radical and militant elements of the BNPP, led by its vice-chairman Wahyuddin Muhammad, broke away from the parent organisation to form the Barisan Bersatu Mujahideen Patani (BBMP- United Mujahideen Front of Patani). Later in 1986 the BNPP renamed itself the Barisan Islam Pembebasan Patani- (BIPP-Islamic Liberation Front of Patani) in order to underline its stronger commitment to Islamist politics.

The developments in Southern Thailand point to a similar trend across the Muslim world in the late 20th century. All over the world disaffected and marginalised Muslim minorities began to clamour for equal rights and equal citizenship, and when these demands were not met they inevitably turned to some form of popular resistance or another. Groups like the PLO in Palestine, PULO and MNLF in ASEAN and others of their ilk were all fighting on secular-democratic platforms, but were defeated due to their secular-leftist orientation. With the Cold War at its height and American power on the ascendant, these groups were summarily labelled as terroristђ or Leftistђ.

The failure of the secular-democratic resistance groups in turn contributed to the shift to the Islamist register and the growing appeal of Islam as a marker of common solidarity and identity among persecuted minority communities. Following the Islamic revolution in Iran in 1979, political Islam became the political tool of choice and this led to the emergence of splinter groups with a more Islamic image and leaning in the 1980s. In the Philippines the MNLF was overtaken by the MILF (Moro Islamic Liberation Front), in Palestine the PLO was eclipsed by Hamas, in Thailand PULO, BRN and BNPP were overtaken by the Barisan Bersatu Mujahideen Patani (BBMP- United Muhajideen Front of Patani) (est. 1985). The rest, as they say, is history and what a bloody, sordid, shameful history it is too.


֑Anti-Terror or Business as Usual?

Thus far the Thai and international public has been fed a steady stream of undiluted hogwash about the possible causes for the insurgency in the region. Prime Minister Thaksin has claimed that ґcriminal gangs may be behind it all. ThailandҒs Chief of Armed Forces General Chaiyasidh Shinawatra has claimed that these fanatical banditsђ may have been under the influence of drugsђ. The regions so-called ґterror experts have pontificated about the alleged links to foreign Islamist militant groups. While Thai government officials insist that this is a local problem that needs to be handled domestically.

None of these lame and flaccid excuses actually help to explain the developments taking place in Southern Thailand at present. To label such groups as ґfanatics, ґterrorists and ґcriminals is to take a page out of the propaganda book of the Cold War when legitimate autonomy and freedom movements were criminalised and pathologised by the cold warriors of the past. Lest it be forgotten, it was the Southern provinces that voted for the democratic party at the past few elections Җ proof, if any was needed, that the Southerners still believed in the democratic process until not too long ago. But the failure of the government to deliver on their much-lauded reform programmes coupled with Bangkok֒s failure to deal with issues like local corruption, nepotism, police brutality and violence meted out by the Thai army has ended up alienating vast sections of Patani society who may now feel that the democratic process simply doesn֒t work and have turned back to radical religio-politics as they did in the 1980s.

Prime Minister Thaksin may well think that he has the green light to go on with his policies vis the South of Thailand. Indeed, with Thailand being declared a major ally of the US at the moment, the geopolitical winds seem to be blowing his way. But the Thai government would be nave and foolish to think that Washingtons endorsement and support for its policies is a fixed factor that will not shift in the future. Likewise Thaksin should consider the fate of other pro-US despots and tyrants of ASEAN, such as Ferdinand Marcos and Soeharto of Indonesia, who were ultimately let down and abandoned by their erstwhile American allies when push came to shove.

In the end, no amount of bogus anti-terror rhetoric or propaganda will alter the fact that Thailands troubles in the southern provinces are rooted in the internal politics of Thai society itself. The people of Southern Thailand feel themselves to be the victims of Bangkoks uneven development policies and like their counterparts in the northeastern province of Phaak Isaan, they feel that they have been left out and cast aside in the nationҒs march towards development. In the end, it is this simple economic and political factor that will shape the future development of relations between Bangkok and the outer provinces. Talk of militant Islamist groupsђ and war on terrorђ should be exposed for what it is: A shallow and facile disguise for a divisive form of politics that has thus far torn apart Thai society, at the cost of the country and its neighbours.


Endnotes:

(1) See: Re: W. K. Che Man, Muslim Separatism: The Moros of Southern Philippines and the Malays of Southern Thailand. Ateneo de Manila University Press, Manila. 1990.

(2) See: Che Wan, 1990. pp. 63-64.

(3) See: Che Wan, 1990. pg. 65.

(4) The Barisan Nasional Pembebasan Patani (BNPP- National Liberation Front of Patani) was formed in 1959 by the ex-leaders of the Gabungan Melayu Patani Raya (GAMPAR-United Greater Patani Malays Movement) and the Patani Peoples Movement (PPM). Its founder Tengku Abdul Jalal (@ Adul Na Saiburi), was himself the ex-Deputy Leader of GAMPAR. The original leaders of the BNPP were mostly members of the traditional Patani Malay elite and religious functionaries like the Ulama and Imams of mosques and madrasahs in Patani. In the 1960s the BNPP opted for guerrilla warfare against the Thai security forces, working with rebels as well as criminal elements within Patani society. One of the BNPP guerrilla leaders was Idris Mat Diah (@ Pak Yeh), who was himself the leader of a local Patani criminal gang. Pak Yeh recruited other bandits and outlaws in order to expand the militia arm of the BNPP. Because its ideology was unclear at the time, the BNPP also managed to attract a large number of followers from a broad spectrum of Patani society. But the BNPPҒs main weakness was its apparent lack of direction and ideological coherence. Its goal of national liberation remained vague, and many of its members were concerned about the dominance of traditional elites and aristocrats.

(5) The Pertubuhan Perpaduan Pembebasan Patani (PULO- Patani United Liberation Organisation) was the only Patani liberation movement founded outside Patani itself. It was formed in 1968 in India by Tengku Bira Kotanila (@ Kabir Abdul Rahman) who was himself a graduate of Aligarh Muslim university. Tengku Bira was helped by a group of Patani students who were studying with him at Aligarh. Soon after the launching of PULO, Tengku Bira transferred himself and the groups main headquarters to Mecca, where he hoped to attract more support from Patani Muslims who were studying there. PULOҒs ideological orientation was largely secular from the start: it aimed at national liberation in the broadest sense, like the PLO and MNLF. PULO rejected the neo-feudal and traditionalist ideology of the BNPP and the Islamic-Socialismђ of the BRN. Its main recruitment grounds were the Arab states and Malaysia. Like the BNPP (est. 1959) and BRN (est. 1963), PULO collected most of its funds from Patani Malays working overseas, particularly in countries like Saudi Arabia. Like the BNPP, PULO was also at ease with the use of militant and guerrilla tactics. It recruited local gang members and bandits to help it with its military operations in the region. It was also more comfortable with militant Muslim states like Syria, Libya, Iran and Algeria (Che Wan, 1990. pg. 106).

(6) The Barisan Revolusi Nasional (BRN- National Revolutionary Front) was formed in March 1963 as a result of a split within the BNPP (Barisan Nasional Pembebasan Patani). By then the BNPP had emerged as the most important Patani-Malay national liberation organisation fighting for the liberation of the Malay states of Patani, Yala, Satun and Narathiwat. But the BNPPs leadership was dominated by Malay aristocrats and religious leaders, and some members of the organisation feared that the BNPPҒs true agenda was to re-establish the Malay Sultanate of Patani with the ruler of Patani as its head of state. The BRN was formed by Ustaz Abdul Karim Hassan and his group aimed to create an independent Republic of Patani instead. Che Wan (1990) described the BRNs ideology as ґIslamic-Socialism (Che Wan, 1990. pg. 109) and the group actively courted the support of other Muslim states like Algeria, Syria and Libya. Between 1963 to 1968, the BRN concentrated mainly on penetrating the local pondok and madrasah networks, in order to recruit more members to its cause. Its activities were severely curtailed in the 1970s after a wave of arrests of BRN leaders by Thai security forces. The BRNҒs only fighting unit was effectively destroyed in 1977 when its leader Cikgu Din Adam was killed by Thai soldiers.


Originally published at
http://www.muslimwakeup.com/main/archives/2004/04/the_killings_in.php 


FURTHER READING
- Muslims in Thailand, http://www.mahidol.ac.th/Thailand/religion/r_muslim.html
-Thai Muslim Lawyer Missing http://www.muslimnews.co.uk/news/news.php?article=7113
- Massacre of 84 Muslims in Thailand http://www.muslimwakeup.com/mainarchive/2004/10/001399print.php
- Fallout From Thailand PM’s Campaign of Violence http://www.afpc.org/asm/asm77.shtml
- Muslims Rally Rejecting Violence http://www.islamonline.net/English/News/2001-06/23/article8.shtml
- Thailand Islamic Insurgency http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/war/thailand2.htm
- Thailand’s Restive South http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/3955543.stm
- Two More Bombs Explode in Thailand’s Troubled South http://www.politinfo.com/articles/article_2004_10_29_5346.html
- Thailand Drops Democracy http://www.newamericancentury.org/thailand-20041004.htm
- Thailand Releases 900 Detainees http://www.islamonline.com/cgi-bin/news_service/world_full_story.asp?service_id=1218
- Muslims Try to Defuse Tensions in South http://www.islamonline.net/English/News/2003-09/14/article06.shtml
- Malaysia Reacts to Killings of Muslims in Thailand http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/FJ30Ae02.html
- Muslim Teacher Killed in Thailand http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_1-12-2004_pg4_8

- Muslims in Thailand, http://www.mahidol.ac.th/Thailand/religion/r_muslim.html
-Thai Muslim Lawyer Missing http://www.muslimnews.co.uk/news/news.php?article=7113
- A Long History of Persecution Unrecorded, Farish Noor http://www.muslimwakeup.com/mainarchive/000760.php#more
- Massacre of 84 Muslims in Thailand http://www.muslimwakeup.com/mainarchive/2004/10/001399print.php
- Fallout From Thailand PM’s Campaign of Violence http://www.afpc.org/asm/asm77.shtml
- Muslims Rally Rejecting Violence http://www.islamonline.net/English/News/2001-06/23/article8.shtml
- Thailand Islamic Insurgency http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/war/thailand2.htm
- Thailand’s Restive South http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/3955543.stm
- Two More Bombs Explode in Thailand’s Troubled South http://www.politinfo.com/articles/article_2004_10_29_5346.html
- Thailand Drops Democracy http://www.newamericancentury.org/thailand-20041004.htm
- Thailand Releases 900 Detainees http://www.islamonline.com/cgi-bin/news_service/world_full_story.asp?service_id=1218
- Muslims Try to Defuse Tensions in South http://www.islamonline.net/English/News/2003-09/14/article06.shtml
- Malaysia Reacts to Killings of Muslims in Thailand http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/FJ30Ae02.html
- Muslim Teacher Killed in Thailand http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_1-12-2004_pg4_8