Thailand in 2004: The “Crisis in the South”

News about Thailand in 2004 was dominated by the “Crisis in the South.” Daily assassinations of local police, soldiers, religious leaders, and other civilians marked a level of insurgency beyond that in other regions of Southeast Asia and one not seen in Thailand for over 30 years. The recurrent vio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Asian survey 2005-02, Vol.45 (1), p.166-173, Article 166
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description News about Thailand in 2004 was dominated by the “Crisis in the South.” Daily assassinations of local police, soldiers, religious leaders, and other civilians marked a level of insurgency beyond that in other regions of Southeast Asia and one not seen in Thailand for over 30 years. The recurrent violence represents a serious challenge to the nation and at this juncture, it is unclear whether Thailand will concede to irredentism, initiate more local autonomy, or settle for a protracted period of political unrest. These events dominated the political picture in preparation for parliamentary elections scheduled for February 2005 and clouded the premise of a stabilizing economy and programs of government change unprecedented in recent Thai history.
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ispartof Asian survey, 2005-02, Vol.45 (1), p.166-173, Article 166
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source PAIS Index; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Armed conflict
Assassinations & assassination attempts
Autonomy
Crises
Government
Insurgency
Irredentism
Local government
Military personnel
Muslims
News
Parliamentary elections
Parliamentary system
Police
Political systems
Radicalism
Recurrent
Religious leaders
Religious terrorism
Separatist movements
Soldiers
Southeast Asia
Violence
Year in review
title Thailand in 2004: The “Crisis in the South”
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