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LETTER FROM SINGAPORE

Southern unrest 'will need political solution'

Career soldier and lawmaker General Vaipot Srinual doesn't say much publicly. But when he does, it tends to hit the political establishment's last good nerve.

Published on December 16, 2007



In the middle of this year, Vaipot jolted the National Legislative Assembly and military-appointed government when he lashed out at the government's policy for the southernmost provinces, where more than 2,600 troops and civilians have been killed in the past five years of daily rebel violence.

Vaipot was suggesting to fellow NLA members that the government was digging graves for the young soldiers dispatched to the deep South to contain a new generation of Malay separatists.

During a recent visit to Singapore, where he attended a workshop with security chiefs from Indonesia and the Philippines, as well as international experts, on the sticky issue of dialogue with insurgents, Vaipot chose his words carefully but didn't shy away from controversy.

He said too much had been pegged on the upcoming general election and the country, including its political leaders and parties, had to take the long view.

"If you ask people in the country, most will tell you that they don't trust the next government, regardless of which political party comes to power, to tackle the key problems facing the country. And because of the general perception that the next government will be short-lived, perhaps the general election shouldn't be the answer," he said.

The country's political leaders need to look for "additional options to move the country forward". Being a hostage to politics has also taken its toll not only on the country's development, but also that of the southernmost provinces.

"We can't afford to come up with a brand new blueprint for the South each time a new government comes into power. There has to be a continuity of political will and policy that is not bound to an administration, keeping in mind that essentially the problem in the South will be solved through political, not military, means," he said.

The former chief of the Armed Forces Supreme Command's Security Centre, who took up the post of National Intelligence Centre director following the September 2006 coup, insisted that the military was not the solution.

While the unremitting violence has frazzled the fabric of local communities, in many cases pitting Muslims and Buddhists against one another, Thais have to "look beyond the daily violence and politics of the day and make the needs and benefits of the local community the centre of the debate. We don't and can't see the groups behind the unrest as a conventional enemy, because they are Thais. They are our citizens." 

Don Pathan

The Nation


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