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Comment from: Jen Han
*****
Thank you so much for posting this. Perhaps you can consider going in depht into more details on this topic.

Do these Thai Chinese speak Thai or can they only speak Chinese and Malay?
20/03/2009 @ 10:43
Comment from: Bill King
*****
Fascinating blog Richard.

We are still feeling the reverberations from these years in Thai national politics.

I have stayed with a guy who fought against the communist guerillas in the south but don't have fluent enough Thai yet to talk with him about it. Maybe next trip.
20/03/2009 @ 13:06
A lot of them speak Thai and English. A few were also Malays and Malayan Indians. They describe their original selves as poor industrial laborers from such cities as Penang, Ipoh and KL. So they tended to view their own richer Chinese relatives as also exploitative.
13/11/2009 @ 10:27
It is important to emphasize that they were Malayan Communist Party Members who sought shelter from the British/Malayan/Malaysian military and police in a fairly remote area just over the Thai border. Carl Rove says they suppressed some local bandit groups, and so were often almost encouraged by some local Thai businessmen and officials. This probably partly accounts for the fact that they weren't exactly defeated by any of the rather intermittent Thai military attacks. Soldiers were often deeply reluctant to face their mines. Especially since they booby-trapped any dwellings they vacated during attacks.

They tended to view the Thai Communist struggle as not exactly their business. (This probably also helped them to survive here for quite a long time.) But there was some cooperation, nonetheless. Mainly in the movement of cadres through Thailand from China.
13/11/2009 @ 10:37

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