Thai tourist attacks probe points to Muslim south: police
Most of those behind a string of bombings in Thai tourist towns are Muslims from the kingdom's insurgency-plagued southern provinces, the country's police chief said yesterday.
It was the first clear indication that police believe a group of southern Muslims played some sort of role in the attacks which killed four and wounded dozens, including European visitors, this month.
Police chief Chakthip Chaijinda told reporters investigators believe a group of "more than 20 people" were behind the coordinated attacks.
"Most of them are from the area of the southern border provinces police operation centre," he said, referencing a policing area that encompasses the Muslim-majority southernmost region.
Asked whether the suspects were Thai nationals he replied: "They are not Buddhists."
He added that investigators had recently searched an Islamic school where he believed some of the suspects had studied or graduated from.
More than 6,500 people, mostly civilians, have been killed in 12 years of violence between the Buddhist-majority state and shadowy ethnic Malay Muslim rebels seeking greater autonomy.
But the violence has largely remained local and foreign visitors are also largely insulated from domestic political clashes that have hit the capital.
That changed on 11-12 August when a string of coordinated bomb and arson attacks struck multiple tourist resort towns in Thailand's south.
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