TERRORISM IN SOUTHERN THAILAND: AN
UPDATE
by B.Raman
The Thai authorities continue to face difficulties in their
efforts to bring the activities of the jihadi
terrorist elements under control in Southern Thailand. The
current wave of jihadi terrorist violence in the three
Muslim majority southern provinces, which started in January
last year, has already cost over 800 lives of Government
servants, innocent civilians and suspected Muslim militants.
2. Like all jihadi terrorist movements, whether in
Afghanistan, Iraq, Chechnya or elsewhere, it has
already passed through two stages and is presently in its
third stage. The first stage saw attacks on the security
forces, including village defence elements, partly to
demonstrate their mobilisation power and partly to
capture arms and ammunition. The second stage saw targeted
attacks on individual government servants and teachers
and non-governmental elements with the help of the arms and
ammunition secured by them during the first stage. The
objective was to spread demoralisation in the ranks of the
Government servants and the teachers of the educational
institutions. The third stage has been seeing increasingly
indiscriminate attacks on innocent civilians through the use
of hand-held weapons as well as improvised explosive devices
(IEDs) and targeted attacks on alleged agents of the police
and the security forces and local Muslims perceived as
co-operating with the Government. The idea is to create
doubts in the minds of the local population about the
ability of the Government to protect them.
3. The third stage has been marked by instances of Muslims
killing Muslims, but such instances are still few and far
between and not widespread as in Afghanistan, Iraq or
Chechnya. There has been no attempt by the terrorists to
establish any territorial control over any part of the
South. While they have shown considerable capability in the
assembling and use of IEDs, they do not as yet have adequate
holdings of hand-held weapons, without which
territorial control is not possible. Nor is there any
evidence to suggest that they want to establish territorial
control.
4. Their present tactical objectives seem to be to
radicalise the local Muslim population, to promote feelings
of Islamic solidarity and Islamic consciousness, to create a
mental and emotional divide between the Muslims and the
non-Muslims, mainly the Buddhists, and to prepare the ground
for a sustained jihad. What is their strategic objective---
greater autonomy for the Muslim-majority provinces or an
independent Muslim homeland to ultimately form part of an
Islamic Caliphate for the whole of South-East Asia? The
answer is not clear from the reports emanating frm South
Thailand, but in the madrasas and mosques of
Bangladesh and Pakistan from where the ideological
inspiration and material support for the movement are
coming, the strategic objective is projected as an
independent Pattani homeland. In Bangladesh and Pakistan,
the Thai Muslims are referred to as the Pattanis.
5. It is an internal movement externally inspired and
supported, but unrelated to the US-led occupation of Iraq
and to Thailand's support to the US. Many of the jihadis
presently operating in Southern Thailand have well
imbibed the operational teachings of their mentors in
Bangladesh and Pakistan, but have not yet been afflicted by
their hatred of the West, particularly the US. Till now,
they have avoided any attacks on foreign targets in Bangkok
or elsewhere. If and when they enter the fourth stage of
their jihad, which is likely to involve attacks on economic
targets, one could expect attacks on foreign nationals and
interests.
6. The external inspiration has so far been mainly from
Bangladesh and Pakistan, the main motivating organisations
being the Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami (HUJI), which has a
presence both in Bangladesh and Pakistan, and the
Lashkar-e-Toiba (LET), which has a presence only in Pakistan
and not in Bangladesh. The extensive media reporting in
Pakistan on the presence of foreign students in Pakistani
madrasas, which followed the reports of the involvement of
three British citizens of Pakistani origin in the London
explosions of July 7,2005, has revealed the presence of
nearly a thousand Pattanis in the Pakistani madrasas.
7. This has been a surprisingly large number. Till the
Pakistani media gave an estimate of the number of Thai
students in their madrasas, one was under the impression
that the flow of Thai Muslims to the madrasas in Pakistan
had considerably declined after the arrest of the brother of
Hambali, the operational chief of the Jemaah Islamiya (JI),
and some other Indonesians and Malaysians from madrasas in
Karachi controlled by the LET and their deportation to their
respective countries in 2003. Instructions had gone to the
Thai Muslims after their deportation to go to Bangladesh
thereafter for studies in the madrasas there since the
Pakistani jihadi organisations, which are members of Osama
bin Laden's International Islamic Front (IIF), were afraid
that the Americans might be keeping a watch on the madrasas
in Pakistan.
8. One does not know when the flow of the so-called Pattanis
to the Pakistani madrasas was resumed. It is also not clear
whether this high number includes only Thai Muslims or
whether this also includes Muslims from the adjoining
provinces of Malaysia. Even the American intelligence
agencies, which have a large presence in Pakistan, seem to
have missed the enrollment of such a large number of Thai
Muslims in the Pakistani madrasas.
9. Many of these Thai Muslims have enrolled themselves in
the madrasas of the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP) and
Balochistan, which are the hotbed of the activities of the
Taliban and the Wahabi-Deobandi organisations of Pakistan.
Some of them have also undergone training in the jihadi
training centres of the Taliban and Gulbuddin Heckmatyar's
Hizbe Islami (HEI) and have been participating in the
current Taliban-HEI-Al Qaeda offensive in Afghanistan from
sanctuaries in the NWFP and Balochistan. Some of the Thai
Muslims were reported to have participated in the widespread
anti-American demonstrations in Afghanistan organised by the
Hizbut Tehrir in protest against the alleged descecration of
the Holy Koran by the American guards at the Guantanamo Bay
Detention Centre in Cuba.
10.The orders issued by Gen.Pervez Musharraf after the
London explosions asking his officials to expel all foreign
students in the madrasas are not being seriously
implemented. There has been opposition to the implementation
of these orders not only from the fundamentalist
organisations, but also from other political parties,
including the ruling Pakistan Muslim League (Qaide Azam),
which is a creation of Musharraf. At a conference of the
Corps Commanders of the Army held on August 13 under
the chairmanship of Musharraf, some of the Corps Commanders
are also reported to have expressed their misgivings over
the wisdom of his action in ordering the expulsion of the
foreign students.
11. The Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA), the coalition of
fundamentalist parties, which is in power in the NWFP and
which is a member of the ruling coalition in Balochistan,
has advised all foreign students in the madrasas of Sindh
and Punjab to shift to the madrasas in the NWFP and
Balochistan and assured them that no action would be taken
against them. About 200 Thai Muslims studying in the Karachi
madrasas have already moved over to the NWFP, Balochistan
and the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA).
12. While there are reports of a creeping Arabisation
of sections of the Muslim youth of Southern Thailand,
similar to what one had seen in Indonesia, there are as yet
no trends which could be described as the possible
Talibanisation of the youth. Recent developments such as the
orders by the Muslim militants to all commercial and other
establishments to close down on Fridays and even Thursdays
are indicative of a greater radicalisation, but not
necessarily of Talibanisation. The two most important
characteristics of Talibanisation are attacks on places of
entertainment such as movie halls and video parlours, and
radio and TV stations and greater restrictions on the
personal lives of women. One has not seen reports of
any such trends in Southern Thailand so far.
13. There has been considerable fraternisation of the Thai
Muslims in Pakistan with the Taliban, the HEI and the
remnants of the Al Qaeda. While this has strengthened their
motivation and feelings of Islamic solidarity, this
influence has not led to the Thai Muslims doing a copy cat
of the mass casualty reprisal terrorism of the Al
Qaeda brand in Southern Thailand. The Al Qaeda's main
strategic interest in cultivating the Thai Muslims and
helping them is in using them for possible acts of maritime
terrorism in the Malacca Straits. The importance of the
Malacca Straits from the point of view of the global jihad
is one of the lessons taught in the madrasas and jihadi
training centres of Pakistan.
14. From the reports available so far from Southern Thailand
as well as Bangladesh and Pakistan, it has not been possible
to establish the identity of the organisation behind the
current jihad in Southern Thailand. Is it the Pattani United
Liberation Organisation or is there a new organisation
behind it? The prestigious "Daily Times" of Lahore
has reported that the decision to launch a jihad in Southern
Thailand was taken at a meeting of the jihadi leaders held
in Lahore, but it has not indicated when this meeting was
held and who attended it.
15. Two characteristics mark the counter-terrorism
operations of the Thai authorities. Firstly, a "kabi
garam, kabi naram" (sometimes hard, sometimes soft)
approach, which creates confusion in the minds of the
counter-terrorism forces as to what exactly is their role
and to what extent they can use force in dealing with the
terrorists.
16. Secondly, the continued poor flow of human and technical
intelligence. The poor human intelligence is due to the fact
that the terrorists, like those in Iraq, are operating in
autonomous cells. As a result, even the capture or surrender
of any terrorist leads to only intelligence about his cell
and not other cells. The poor technical intelligence is due
to the fact that the jihadi terrorists in Southern Thailand
are avoiding the use of technical means for their
communications and seem to be using couriers.
17. The apparent fact that even the American intelligence
has not been able to be of any help in improving the
technical intelligence flow is due to the avoidance of
technical means of communications by the terrorists. The
only way of improving the flow of human intelligence is
through better police-Muslim community relations. This has
not yet received the required attention. The local Muslim
population has definitely been intimidated by the jihadi
terrorists into carrying out their directives as seen in the
widespread compliance with the directive to close down
the business establishments on Fridays and Thursdays, but
from this, it does not necessarily follow that the general
Muslim population, whatever be their grievances against the
Thai Government, shares the objectives of the jihadis and
approves their methods of operation.
18. There is still a window of opportunity for the Thai
authorities to dilute the feelings of alienation in the
Muslim population so that their support could be enlisted in
the counter-terrorism operations. The difficulties for the
Thai authorities are likely to multiply when the Thai
Muslims presently in Pakistan and Bangladesh start
returning. They have to tone up their counter-terrorism
set-up and policies without any further delay.
19. It would be in the interest of the Malaysian authorities
to co-operate fully with their Thai counterparts. If the
infection is not stopped in Southern Thailand, it is only a
question of time before it spreads to Malaysia and the
Malacca Straits. Jihadi terrorists recognise no national
borders---neither of the non-Muslim countries nor of the
Muslim countries.
(The writer is Additional Secretary (retd),
Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and,
presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai,
and Distinguished Fellow and Convenor, Observer Research
Foundation (ORF), Chennai Chapter. E-mail: itschen36@gnail.com)