Desperately Seeking Success in the Thai Deep South | Asia Sentinel
Murray Hunter, 02 March 2013
Malaysia to host negotiations with Thailand's Islamic insurgents
The surprise of an agreement signed between the Thai government and
Malaysia during Premier Yingluck Shinawatra's visit to Kuala Lumpur for
negotiations with one of the major insurgent groups, the Barisan
Revolusi Nasional (BRN), should actually not be a surprise. It is also
questionable whether there is anything to the agreement.
Malaysia is heading into what could be called a watershed election.
Premier Najib Tun Razak's personal popularity rating has fallen although
it is still well into positive territory, there have been a number of
campaigning mishaps for him of late, and there is an embarrassing
military stand-off in Sabah with a group loyal to the Sulu Sultan, where
the Philippine President Benigno S. Aquino is the one taking
initiatives.
In this environment, both the Thai and Malaysian governments need a
breakthrough. Of late, the insurgents have undertaken many embarrassing
ploys like displaying Malaysian flags on Aug. 31, Malaysia?s
Independence day. In addition, troops and other security forces are all
tied trying to protect major towns like Hat Yai and Chana from attacks,
and Yingluck has her brother's legacy of poor handling of the insurgency
hanging over her. Najib badly needs some form of diplomatic coup to
bolster his credentials, particularly with the rural Malays in Kelantan
who are not unsympathetic to the insurgent cause, and the general
population of Malaysia with the oncoming election.
The memorandum was signed in Malaysia?s administrative capital of
Putrajaya by Lieutenant-General Panradom Pattanathabur, Secretary
general of Thailand's National Security Council, and Utaz Hassan Taib,
who was identified as the chief of the BRN liaison office in Malaysia.
The document, signed on Feb. 28, has been heralded by all as an
historical agreement and has been reported widely in both the mainstream
Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur Press, although it's interesting Malaysia's
online press hardly mentioned it.
The BRN, formed in 1963, is one of up to 20 different insurgency groups
in Thailand?s deep south. Although it may one of the largest groups, it
is yet to be seen if any others may come on board, or even take a
hostile view, believing that they have been left out and should be the
group that the government negotiates. With jealousies between some of
these groups, this is a minor risk that the Thai government has taken.
As it has actually not been spelt out by the various insurgency groups
what demands and aspirations they have, this process will at least put
these points on the table for examination. In this sense the memorandum
is a potential breakthrough because it may establish the gambit of
positions both sides will talk from. Ironically through this insurgency,
very few concrete demands or aspirations have actually been aired,
although the various groups harbor ideals and aspirations alone a wide
continuum.
Malaysia?s will be interesting. With an election nearing, the federal
government wants peace along the border and there are actually great
trade advantages to a peaceful south through the IMT-GT. The Malaysian
military and police are generally cooperative with the Thai authorities
over border security issues and have established good relationships.
However some insurgents are also Malaysian citizens, or at least have
very close Malaysian relatives, and to some degree are integrated within
the "pondok communities" within Kelantan. Perhaps Malaysia's prime role
will be just acting as a chairman to these meetings to maintain
negotiations, rather than acting more proactively in suggesting
solutions. The true value of the Malaysian role will therefore be just
to hold the process together, which may not be an easy task, given the
emotional issues involved.
Any success will depend upon there not being any hidden agendas between
the 2+1 parties. With the complexities of Thai politics, the military,
the various insurgency groups and their splinters, and Malaysian
politics, particularly related to the constituency of Kelantan, this
could be a tall order. However there is also the hope that all sides are
tired and through this process, there can be reaching out to other
insurgency groups.
Much of this will personally depend upon the skills and attitude taken
by Panradom Pattanathabur and the reception he gets from members of the
BRN delegation. The other question here is over who Hassan Taib actually
represents within the BRN, which has a number of splinter groups. Even
if Hassan is speaking for a wide series of groups, every point of
negotiations would have to be discussed in community shariah in every
province to obtain any consensus, which could be daunting.
One must also remember this is not the first time peace talks have been
attempted with many different moderators including former Malaysian
Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamed in the Langkawi talks a few years ago,
and later with former Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra. Both went
nowhere.
One aspect that has not been tackled by both governments in this
agreement is the role drug traffickers, bandits, gangsters, and other
criminal elements are playing in this insurgency problem. It is in their
interest to have turmoil in the deep south so they can carry out their
trade. These groups are part of the problem and they need to be dealt
with in any process for it to be a success.
The first meeting is scheduled to be held in Malaysia within the next
two weeks, and every fortnight afterwards. It would be surprising if
much information about these talks actually leaks out. However the
meeting itself is something positive and who actually turns up to these
meetings from the insurgents side will be very telling of eventual
success of this process.
What is sure, while the violence will not stop immediately, the
immediate level of violence may indicate how seriously various groups
look at this upcoming process of negotiation. The Yingluck government
has given some authority to the military to negotiate, who may take a
more hardline than the government would. However from the Thai point of
view some process is going on which is better than no process. The
agreement to the Malaysian Government as the moderator is a redeeming
event in foreign policy for the Najib Government. The BN will be hoping
that this may provide some positive mileage among the rural Malays of
Kelantan, who they need to win over if any positive electoral.
Meanwhile the people of the deep south will continue to go about their daily lives with extreme caution.
(Murray Hunter is an Australian academic teaching at a Malaysian university and a frequent contributor to Asia Sentinel.)
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