(9 Jun 2009)
1. Wide of villagers and officers gathered in front of a mosque attacked by gunmen on Monday night
2. Close up of broken window
3. Various of bullet casings on table
4. Interior of mosque with bodies under sheets lying on the ground
5. Family members carrying dead body out of mosque
6. Wide of people in front of mosque
7. Various of people carrying bodies out of mosque
8. Soldiers and villagers inside mosque
9. Villagers moving dead bodies inside mosque
10. Villagers inside mosque
11. Various of villagers outside mosque
STORYLINE:
Gunmen opened fire on a mosque in southern Thailand during evening prayers, killing at least 10 people and wounding another 19 in the violence-plagued region, police said.
The attack on Monday was one of the deadliest incidents since an Islamic separatist insurgency was launched in Thailand's three southernmost provinces in early 2004.
More than 3,400 people have been killed in the violence, most victims of the insurgents.
Five or six men shot automatic rifles into the mosque in Narathiwat province's Joh-I-Rong district on Monday, said a police lieutenant.
However, the Web site of the newspaper The Nation cited Army spokesman as saying there were only two attackers.
The newspaper also reported that an 11th person had died en route to hospital.
Among those who died at the mosque was the imam, or prayer leader, said a police lieutenant who added that most of the 19 people wounded in the attack were in serious condition.
Narathiwat, Pattani and Yala provinces, where virtually all the violence has occurred, are the only Muslim-majority provinces in predominantly Buddhist Thailand.
Southern Muslims have long complained of discrimination, especially in education and job opportunities.
Last week two teachers, one eight months pregnant, were killed in the same province in an attack attributed to the insurgents.
The deaths triggered intense anger among the area's Buddhist community.
Security forces sometimes blame the insurgents for attacks on Muslim individuals and institutions, claiming they mean to stir up hatred to boost their cause and trigger sectarian strife.
Very rarely does any group claim responsibility for any attacks on either community.
The attack came on the same day Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva was on an official visit to Malaysia to hold talks about the insurgency and economic cooperation.
Southern Thai Muslims are ethnic Malays, a background shared with most people just across the border in northern Malaysia, where there is sympathy for their plight.
Insurgent attacks - which include drive-by shootings and bombings - are believed intended to frighten Buddhist residents into leaving the area.
They also target Muslims whom the rebels believe have collaborated with the government, including soldiers, police, informants and civilians.
The identity and precise goals of the insurgents have never been publicly declared.
They pursue an ill-defined agenda that sometimes seems to call for a separate Islamic state.
A massive government counterinsurgency effort has slowed the pace of attacks but has shown little sign of ending the violence.
Abhisit announced in March that 4,000 more soldiers and other security personnel would be deployed to the region, supplementing more than 60,000 - including local part-time forces - already there.
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