Ra-ngae District
Ra-ngae (Thai: ระแงะ, pronounced [rā.ŋɛ́ʔ]) is a district (amphoe) in Narathiwat Province, southern Thailand.
Ra-ngae ระแงะ | |
---|---|
District location in Narathiwat Province | |
Coordinates: 6°17′47″N 101°43′42″E | |
Country | Thailand |
Province | Narathiwat |
Seat | Tanyong Mat |
Area | |
• Total | 435.6 km2 (168.2 sq mi) |
Population (2005) | |
• Total | 144,259 |
• Density | 331.2/km2 (858/sq mi) |
Time zone | UTC+7 (ICT) |
Postal code | 96130 |
Geocode | 9605 |
History
Mueang Ra-ngae was divided from Pattani in the reign of King Rama I by Vice-King Boworn Maha Surasinghanat. The governor position was Phraya Ra-ngae. The old city office was near Kelantan state. When the first governor escaped from the city, the next governor moved the office to Tambon Tanyong Mat. In 1906 when King Chulalongkorn established Monthon Pattani, Mueang Ra-ngae was one of the satellite cities of the monthon.
In late-2019, three young woodcutters were murdered by Thai troops in Bo-ngo Subdistrict. The government claimed initially that the killings occurred in a clash between paramilitary Rangers and terrorists. Later, the Human Rights Protection Committee, appointed by the Fourth Army Area Commander, concluded that soldiers mistook the dead men for terrorists and killed them as they were running away. Families of the deceased pointed out that the young men possessed nothing but wood cutting tools. Images of the dead men on social media showed that each of them was shot in the head—two of them sitting crossed-leg on the ground, leaning forward. The Commander of the Fourth Army Area issued an apology, a compensation payment of 500,000 baht for each death, and transferred the responsible commander of the 45th Ranger Forces Regiment elsewhere.[1]
Geography
Neighboring districts are (from the north clockwise): Yi-ngo, Mueang Narathiwat, Cho-airong, Su-ngai Padi, Sukhirin, Chanae, Si Sakhon, and Rueso.
Namtok Sipo National Park is in Ra-ngae.[2]
Administration
The district is divided into seven sub-districts (tambons), which are further subdivided into 60 villages (mubans). Tanyong Mat and Ma Rue Bo Tok both have township (thesaban tambon) status and cover parts of the tambons with the same names.
No. | Name | Thai name | Villages | Pop. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Tanyong Mat | ตันหยงมัส | 12 | 18,726 | |
2. | Tanyong Limo | ตันหยงลิมอ | 8 | 7,657 | |
6. | Bo-ngo | บองอ | 10 | 14,009 | |
7. | Kalisa | กาลิซา | 6 | 12,765 | |
8. | Ba-ngo Sato | บาโงสะโต | 8 | 9,549 | |
9. | Chaloem | เฉลิม | 7 | 9,924 | |
10. | Maruebo Tok | มะรือโบตก | 9 | 11,629 |
Missing numbers are the tambon which now form Cho-airong District.
References
- Tangprasert, Sarayut (13 April 2020). "Songs, tales, tears: State violence in the periphery from past to present". Prachatai English. Retrieved 18 April 2020.
- "Namtok Sipo National Park". Department of National Parks (DNP). Archived from the original on 29 September 2007.