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HomeNewsTwo killed and several injured in series of blasts in southern Thailand

Two killed and several injured in series of blasts in southern Thailand

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A series of bomb blasts hit three of the most popular tourist resorts in southern Thailand on Thursday (August 11) and Friday(August 12), killing two people and wounding dozens, just days after the country voted to accept a military-backed constitution in a referendum.

 Twin blasts hit the upscale resort of Hua Hin, around 200 kilometres (125 miles) south of Bangkok, on Friday morning just hours after two bombs killed one person and wounded 21 late on Thursday.

 Hua Hin is home to the Klai Kangwon royal palace, which translates as ‘Far from Worries Palace’, where King Bhumibol Adulayadej, the world's longest reigning monarch, and his wife Sirikit have often stayed in recent years.

 Friday (August 12) was a public holiday in Thailand to mark Queen Sirikit's birthday.

 One person died and three people were wounded in one of the Friday (August 12) morning blasts near an iconic clock tower in Hua Hin, deputy police spokesman Police Colonel Krisana Pattanacharoen told reporters in Bangkok.

 Two small bombs exploded in the tourist beach town of Patong on Phuket island and two more in Phang Nga, another tourist region north of Phuket on Friday (August 12), local police said. One Thai man was lightly wounded in Patong, police said.

 Police believe the series of blasts were acts of local sabotage and not linked to any international militant group, deputy police spokesman Piyaphand Pingmuangsaid told reporters.

 They had not yet found any connection between the blasts in the three popular tourist destinations in the southern Thailand, he said. It was also unclear whether the blasts were related to an  insurgency in Muslim-majority provinces in southern Thailand, he added.

 The Friday morning blasts in Hua Hin came after a bomb exploded near a bar in the town late on Thursday that killed one Thai woman and wounded 21 people, Police Col. Krisana said.

 Nine of those injured in Thursday night's twin blasts in Hua Hin were foreigners, Hua Hin deputy police chief Samer Yousamran said. Those twin explosions were detonated by mobile device, police said. The first took place 20 minutes earlier and about 50 metres from the second, but injured nobody.

 Twin blasts are common in the three Muslim-majority southernmost provinces of Thailand, where a bloody insurgency has killed more than 6,500 people since 2004.

 The three provinces soundly rejected the referendum on the new military backed constitution which passed overwhelmingly in the rest of the country in Sunday's vote. 

 Violence has occasionally spilled over to areas outside the three provinces, which were part of a Malay sultanate until it was annexed by Buddhist-majority Thailand a century ago.

 Hua Hin, Phuket and Phang Nga are far from the usual conflict zone, where attacks typically target security forces and not tourists.

 In a separate incident on Friday, Thai media reported two bombs had exploded in the southern province of Surat Thani, killing one person and wounding five.

 Small improvised bombs have been used frequently for attacks during periods of unrest over the past decade of political turmoil in Thailand.

 However, such attacks have been rare since the military seized power in a May 2014 coup.

 The latest bombings came almost a year after an attack on a Hindu shrine thronged with tourists in central Bangkok killed 20 people and wounded more than 120. Thai police have accused two ethnic Uighur Muslims for the Aug. 17, 2015, attack.

 King Bhumibol and his wife Sirikit are both in hospital in Bangkok and have not resided recently at their palace in Hua Hin. Check points have been established and security beefed up around Hua Hin and a royal palace in the resort.   

 King Bhumibol has received treatment for an infection over the past month in a Bangkok hospital, the Royal Household Bureau said on August 1. Concern about the health of the king and nervousness over the succession have played into the country's political tensions.

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