One person was killed and 14 wounded Sunday in a series of apparently co-ordinated blasts - including a car bomb - in a major town in Thailand's insurgency-hit south, the army said. Four explosions rocked Yala, a provincial capital, on Sunday afternoon including a device hidden in a car which destroyed the vehicle and damaged several nearby buildings.
Car bombs are rare in the Muslim-majority south, which has seen near-daily shootings and bomb attacks in a decade-long rebellion against Thai rule.
The charred and mangled wreckage of the car remained in the street hours after the blast as plumes of thick smoke spiralled into the air, according to an AFP photographer.
"There were four almost simultaneous explosions in Yala town," army spokesman Colonel Promote Prom-in told AFP.
"One of the devices was hidden in a car which was stolen a long time ago. The car had also been used for several robberies," he said.
A second bomb hidden in a suitcase killed one person, he said, while two smaller devices hit a market and a bank.
Yala is one of three Muslim-majority southern provinces afflicted by an insurgency which pits shadowy rebels, seeking a level of autonomy for the region, against Thai troops and police.
Around 6,000 people have been killed in the festering conflict - the majority of them civilians caught between the warring sides.
Several rounds of peace talks last year had raised hopes of progress towars a peace settlement. But a six-month-old political crisis in Bangkok has seen the negotiations suspended. During the hiatus rebels have stepped up the violence, attacking "soft" non-military targets.
Observers say the spike in violence is in response to Thailand's failure to respond to rebel demands to work towards a road map for peace.