NEWS & ANALYSIS ON MAJOR INCIDENTS

- Unofficial talks may fan the flames of insurgency
- Is Chavalit fostering false hope in the deep South?
- Analysis :Ceasefire in south is just too good to be true
- Pornthip means well, but she misunderstands the south
- Army's abuses come home to roost in South
- Deep south insurgency puts strain on thai-malay relations
- In the South, the media, too, must think outside the box
- Lessons from the southern insurgency not learned
- Insurgents make it clear there is no neutral ground
- BANGKOKIAN: Odd silence on south
- Political rumblings in the deep South
- No progress in checking unrest
- Hope for the southern poor
- Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea
- 'Pushing people towards the insurgents'
- Analysis :Premier has wasted opportunity in South
- Crisis in south rooted in ethnic Malay identity
- Bombs 'like those in Bangkok'
- Schools aim to rise from ashes
- Harsh realities mar peace efforts in South
- Scars of Krue Se bloodbath refuse to go away
- Off-the-wall comments, suggestions have not helped
- Anti-terror effort needs closer cooperation: Nitya
- Old separatists still dream of a free patani
- Mahathir: Talk with exiled South leaders
- Military to enforce ban on public gatherings
- Rewards dropped for the arrest of militants - South to get 3,000 more troops after violence escalates
- Pulo alleges targeted killings
- 'Talks vital to restore peace in the South'
- No end in sight to violence in south - PREMIER'S FIRST BORDER TOUR: Surayud apologises for govt's abuses in South
- Government reaches out to the South
- The long road to peace in the deep South
- Just a local affair or prelude to terrorism?
- Insurgency 'has crossed a new threshold'
- South an elusive 'spider's web' for generals
- Southeast Asia the second front of global terror?
- Sonthi makes a needed overture in the South
- Southern blasts clear way for army plans
- Soldier killed by bomb in Narathiwat
- Volunteer shot dead in South
- Force alone won't win battle with insurgents
- Six dead in series of bombings, shootings in Yala, Narathiwat
- South militants number 3,000
- Army chief 'welcome in restive South'
- Push for Sondhi to boost his role
- Bombs, bullets kill 3 on weekend
- Bombings spark a scramble for excuses
- Don't make us your scapegoat: Malaysia
- Lull ends in savage wave of 44 blasts
- Admin body urged for South
- What chance of reconciliation in the South?
- More arrests in teachers' assault case
- Troubled school gets 20 teachers
- Letter from KUCHING REUPAH
- South militancy has been years in making
- More held over brutal beating of 2 teachers
- Army 'must respond quicker'
- 3 arrests over hostage taking
- Hopelessly adrift in the stormy south
- HOSTAGE TAKING: Army's image takes beating
- Juling's vision of peace
- RESTIVE SOUTH: 100 schools to shut for a week





Blast kills 3, injures 16

Published on May 11, 2006 - Woman said to have parked motorcycle laden with explosives

Two women and a soldier were killed and 16 others injured when a powerful blast ripped through a teashop and tore a military vehicle to pieces here yesterday.

One of the dead women was four months pregnant.

The bomb was carried on a motorbike and parked next to a Unimog military transport vehicle just five metres from a teashop frequented by soldiers and police.

The explosion spread deadly shrapnel across a 50-metre radius.

Police are looking for a woman in her forties suspected of parking the motorbike near the teashop. Preliminary reports said the bike was laden with about a kilogram of TNT.

An officer, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said an eyewitness had seen the woman riding the motorcycle and parking it next to the military vehicle just 10 minutes before it exploded.

It is believed the bomb was set off with a remote control.

The bomb was stuffed in a PVC pipe, sealed with plastic and placed in a paint can in the motorcycle's basket.

Benjawan Pomanee, 33, who was four months pregnant, and school teacher, Nanthanit Sithahiran, 35, were killed, while Private Suthirat Chuthichote, 22, from the Pattani-based Fourth Army Area's Forward Command died in hospital later.

Of the 16 injured, three were soldiers from the same unit as Private Suthirat and five were local civil servants, including a retired police officer.

The scene at the front of a residential office building next to the teashop was one of near-total destruction.

Shrapnel riddled the entire shop front with holes. Pickups parked along the two-lane street dotted with shop-houses were left pockmarked by the blast.

Pools of blood lay where those maimed had previously stood.

Across the street, Niya Yakoh, 58, badly shaken by the incident, said she was terrified for the life of her four-year-old daughter who was playing in the street when the bomb went off.

"We ran towards each other, I was so terrified, I just snatched her into my arms and then looked for a place to take cover," Niya said.

Her shop-house was left relatively unscathed, because her pickup, parked out in the front, bore the brunt of the blast.

The incident came one day after four people were killed and seven injured, including two soldiers, in this Malay-speaking southernmost province that has suffered more than two years of insurgent violence.

Yesterday's bombing was carried out despite tight security at various intersections in Pattani's Muang district, where local residents have been celebrating the week-long annual Red Cross fair.

Separately, more than 100 soldiers and police conducted a sweep in Badabareh village in Narathiwat's Muang district and discovered bomb-making materials buried at five different locations. The authorities confiscated fuses and about half a kilogram of dynamite.

Don Pathan
The Nation
Pattani



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