Thai authorities prepared a draconian state of emergency for insurgency-hit areas of the country's Muslim south, where violence continued unabated yesterday with two slayings and a bombing that injured seven security personnel.
A daring raid on a southern city by militants last week prompted the Cabinet to adopt a decree Friday giving Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra sweeping new emergency powers that are unparalleled for a democratically elected Thai leader. Critics complain that the decree is unconstitutional and dictatorial.
Thai security officials recommended that the new emergency be imposed on the provinces of Yala, Pattani and Narithiwat -- where virtually all the attacks in the 18-month-old insurgency have taken place -- and parts of nearby Songkla province, Cabinet Secretary Bowornsak Uwanno said.
PHOTO: AFP
The Cabinet was expected to approve the recommendation and put the emergency into effect today, he said.
The military already has been in the southern provinces in force since early last year. The new decree expands the government's authority to impose curfews, ban public gatherings, censor news and close publications, limit travel, detain suspects without charge, confiscate property and tap telephones.
Thaksin says the measure is necessary to curb violence in the south, where about 900 people have died in hundreds of drive-by shootings and scores of bombings since Islamic separatists launched their insurgency in January of last year.
Thaksin's critics say his hardline military response has made the violence worse. Nida Waba, a Muslim community leader in Pattani, said there would be no improvement in the south as long as Thaksin remains in office.
"Thaksin is not a troubleshooter -- he is the one who is creating the problem in southern Thailand," he said.
Den Tohmeena, a southern Senator whose father and brother were accused of being Islamic separatists in the 1970s, said the new law will make little difference to people in the south because they feel it is "a corrupt government."
"The local people are used to abuse of power by government officials and security personnel, so whatever decree or law is imposed will make no difference to them," Den said.
Yesterday, suspected separatists in Narathiwat set off a bomb on a bridge while a truck carrying soldiers and police passed by. Five soldiers and two policemen were hurt.
Also yesterday, a motorcycle gunman fatally shot a teacher in Pattani and a rubber plantation worker was slashed to death. A soldier was shot dead while on patrol in Narathiwat.
The new emergency decree was issued after Islamic insurgents attacked the Yala provincial capital on Thursday, destroying electrical transformers to black out the city, setting off firebombs and firing automatic weapons before escaping. King Bhumibol Adulyadej signed the measure into law on Sunday.
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