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Ihsanoglu
expressed “serious dissatisfaction at the persisting bloody acts
of violence perpetrated against Muslims in southern Thailand”.
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BANGKOK,
March 1, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) - With analysts seeing little chance
of the Thai PM to change his hawkish policies, Thailand said it was
sending envoys to meet with the head of the Organization of the
Islamic Conference (OIC) to explain its policies in the
violence-wracked Muslim-majority south.
Thailand
will dispatch three special envoys to the OIC following a strongly
worded statement from the 57-member body condemning the government’s
hard-line policy towards the Muslim-majority South, Thai Foreign
Minister Surakiart Sathirathai said Monday, February 28, according to
Malaysian daily The Nation.
The
OIC has appealed to the government to end “persistent bloody acts of
violence” against Muslims in southern Thailand.
In
a recent statement, OIC Secretary-General Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu
expressed “serious dissatisfaction at the persisting bloody acts of
violence perpetrated against Muslims in southern Thailand”.
The
appeal was made in a statement that followed a meeting between
Ihsanoglu and Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi, chairman of
the 10th Islamic Summit Conference to be held in Saudi Arabia later
this year.
Ihsanoglu
had said violence against Muslims continued despite appeals made by
the OIC and the international community to the Thai government to end
the violations that have claimed the lives of hundreds of people.
He
also called for a “a just and urgent investigation into the causes
of these incidents and to put an end to them”.
The
Thai envoys, two Muslims and a Buddhist, are Charan Maluleem, a
government adviser on Islamic affairs, Nissai Vejjajiva, an adviser to
the foreign minister, and former ambassador to Tehran Mahadi Wimana.
Nissai
said he considered problems in the South an “internal affair”, but
fell short of saying the OIC has no right to voice its point of view
on the subject, according to the paper.
The
decision to dispatch envoys is the government’s latest effort to
prevent problems in the restive region from spilling over into the
international arena, the paper added.
Thaksin
has vowed Thursday, February 17, to crush
“separatist revolt” in the predominantly-Muslim south within four
years, saying his government would cut off aid to villages who help
separatists there.
But
the plan drew fierce criticism in the region, with Muslim leaders,
academics and politicians saying it would encourage support for a
separatism in which more than 500 people have been killed since it
erupted in January last year and would further damage business
confidence.
Representatives
of several civic groups signed an open letter to Thaksin demanding him
to scrap his recent order to divide some 1,500 villages into
“red”, “yellow” or “green” zones according to their level
of alleged sympathy for rebels or support of authorities.
Unlikely
Change
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Analysts
Doubt Thaksin is likely to change his harsh strategy. (Reuters)
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Within
the same context, analysts and Muslim leaders said Tuesday, March 1
that although the Thai Prime Minister has sought rare advice from
critics of his tough stance towards unrest in the Muslim far south, he
is unlikely to change tack, according to Reuters.
Normally
intolerant of any criticism, Thaksin has surprised his opponents by
inviting academics and villagers to come up with non-violent proposals
to end the violence, it added.
However,
few believe that Thaksin, fresh from a landslide second election
victory, will heed their words.
“The
government has created an image that it is willing to listen to others
and ready to let them join its effort in solving the problem in the
south,” political scientist Bukhoree Yeema of Rajabhat Songkhla
University told Reuters.
“But
I doubt if the Prime Minister will sincerely listen to them and
implement some of their advice, or whether he will just listen and say
those non-violence methods won’t work so he needs to continue with
the hawkish approach.”
Religious
leaders in the region, where four out of five people are Muslim, said
villagers were tired of voicing their opinions to a wide variety of
government officials who seldom did anything about them.
“We've
made suggestions to officials from a deputy prime minister to
provincial governors and district heads, but we've never seen concrete
implementation of our plans,” Narathiwat Islamic council chief,
Abdulrahman Abdulsahad, told Reuters.
“We've
wasted so much time giving them so many opinions and so much
advice,” Abdulrahman said, adding people were still living in
“fear for their lives”.
He
also urged the government to be more open and accessible, as suggested
Monday by Prem Tinsulanonda, a former prime minister and chief adviser
to revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej.
“Whichever
organizations want to settle the problem must know what is really
going on. They must also know correctly the problem they are going to
resolve,” Prem, who served as prime minister from 1980 to 1988, told
a recent seminar on the thorny south problems.
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Thaksin
won elections, but not a single seat in the Muslim south.
(Reuters)
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Thailand
is a predominantly Buddhist nation but about five percent of the
population is Muslim, and most live in the five southern provinces
bordering Malaysia.
Pattani,
Yala and Narathiwat are the only Muslim majority provinces in
Thailand, where Muslims have long complained
of discrimination in jobs and education and business
opportunities.
On
October 25, a total of 87 Muslims died after Thai troops broke up a
protest at Tak Bai in the southern province of Narathiwat with
tear gas, water cannon and gunfire.
The
majority of victims suffocated or were crushed after being bound and
left for hours on trucks.