A car bomb detonated outside an urban police station in Thailand's restive south Saturday, injuring at least seven people and offering a reminder of the region's simmering violence as the ruling junta eyes full peace talks with the insurgents. The explosive, hidden inside a passenger car, was set off in the middle of the day in the capital of Pattani province, one of three Muslim-majority states wracked by rebellion in the kingdom's southern tail.
"The bomb was put in a Honda Jazz, which was stolen from a nearby village this morning," provincial police commander Major General Thanongsak Wangsupa told AFP. More than 6,000 people have died in 10 years of near-daily violence between state security forces and the loose network of Muslim insurgents, who are seeking greater autonomy from Buddhist-majority Thailand, which annexed the region a century ago.
Saturday's bomb injured at least six police officers and one civilian and sent plumes of black smoke streaming into the sky. The wounded have been hospitalised for burns and other critical injuries from the explosion, emergency workers said. Thailand's military, which seized control of the entire country in a 2014 coup, has been reaching out to some representatives from the shadowy insurgent network in an effort to start full-scale peace talks.
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