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Bomb kills four rangers in Thailand’s restive south

Four paramilitary rangers were killed and two others wounded in an ambush when suspected rebels detonated a bomb buried in a road in Thailand’s insurgency-plagued south.

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Suspected muslim militants are escorted by Thai police and soldiers after being arrested in Thailand's restive southern province of Narathiwat on Friday. Photo: AFP
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Four paramilitary rangers were killed and two others wounded in an ambush when suspected rebels detonated a bomb buried in a road in Thailand’s insurgency-plagued south, local police said on Friday.

The mid-morning attack was a grizzly reminder that rebels in Muslim-majority deep south have yet to curb violence against Thai security forces – or civilians – despite ongoing peace talks in neighbouring Malaysia.

Police said the rangers were travelling in a pick-up truck to meet Muslim community leaders in the Saiburi district of Pattani, one of Thailand’s southernmost provinces hit by a near-decade long rebellion which has claimed more than 5,500 lives.

“Four rangers were killed and two wounded, among them is a commander who is severely wounded,” Sergeant Montri Prommee of Saiburi police said, adding the explosive device was buried in the road.

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“They (the insurgents) want to create situations (unrest) on important days,” he added, referring to the timing of the attack on one of the most important Buddhist holidays of the Thai calendar.

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