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Spiralling Insurgency in the Deep South: Thailand’s Unseen Road to Ethnic Conflict Management

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Part of the book series: Asia in Transition ((AT,volume 3))

Abstract

This chapter looks at how the on-going ethnic conflict in southern Thailand has been handled by the conflicting parties, i.e., the national government and Patani Malay insurgents. The major challenge for the management of this conflict is that the long-standing security structure which used to absorb and contain violence effectively in the deep South was dismantled by the administration of Thaksin Shinawatra. Since then, the successive governments have been tied down in coping with the chaotic crisis and spiralling violence in the southern region that have continued to date on top of another and larger crisis of national political polarisation, while not much attention has been paid to dissolving the fundamental incompatibilities of the conflict, which can be summarised as the contention between “peace and stability” and “peace, freedom, and recognized sovereignty”. Even if the parties to conflict squarely tackle the incompatibilities, it appears to be quite difficult for them to reach a mutually acceptable solution, as the Thai establishment has consistently ruled out the “autonomy option” by sticking to their Thaification tenets. The conflict has been internationalised to a considerably degree, but an international solution to the internationalised conflict does not seem to come by easily.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    There were several difficulties that faced the Ramadhan Peace Initiative. First of all, the proposed ceasefire came after just three meetings between the two parties. As a result, they neither prepared a detailed implementation plan nor laid the groundwork for any monitoring of the suspension of military operations. Moreover, the initiative was not welcomed by Thai armed forces on the ground. Several troubling incidents that occurred in the early days of the ceasefire undermined its credibility. Besides, the initiative had not been designed for the involvement of other stakeholders, i.e., other armed groups and representatives of civil society in the Patani region (McCargo 2014a, b; Bean 2013).

  2. 2.

    The five demands of the militant group are: (1) recognition of BRN as the representative of the Patani people; (2) appointment of Malaysia as a mediator, not simply a facilitator; (3) involvement of ASEAN countries, the OIC and NGOs in the process; (4) recognition of the existence and the sovereignty of the Patani Malay nation; and (5) release of all detained Patani fighters from prisons.

  3. 3.

    Modern peace processes, such as that between Manila and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front which successfully reached two peace agreements with Malaysian facilitation in October 2012 and January 2014 respectively, have been benefitted from suggestions and advices from experts and civil society groups such as NGOs, religious groups, and business associations, etc. (Bean 2013; Rood 2005: 36–38).

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Correspondence to Mikio Oishi .

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© 2016 Springer Science+Business Media Singapore

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Quang, N.M., Oishi, M. (2016). Spiralling Insurgency in the Deep South: Thailand’s Unseen Road to Ethnic Conflict Management. In: Oishi, M. (eds) Contemporary Conflicts in Southeast Asia. Asia in Transition, vol 3. Springer, Singapore. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-0042-3_4

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