The kingdom's Muslim-majority "deep south", an area bordering Malaysia, has seen near daily bombings and shootings since the most recent wave of rebellion erupted in 2004.
More than 6,600 people -- mostly civilians -- have died in an underreported conflict that pits ethnic Malay militants against security forces from Thailand's Buddhist-majority state.
Today three police officers in their late 20s were killed after a bomb struck their car in Yala province.
After detonating the bomb, which was buried underneath the road, the assailants fired on the police from the surrounding jungle, the officer added.
Staff at a provincial hospital confirmed the deaths and said one police officer was also wounded in the blast.
Remote and surrounded by densely forested hills, Krongpinang is an insurgency hot-spot where mistrust for Thai security forces runs high.
Thailand's ruling junta says it has tried to restart peace talks with the Muslim militants since it took power in 2014.
The rebels are also widely believed to be behind an unprecedented string of bomb blasts on tourist towns outside their conflict zone in August, killing four people and wounding dozens, including foreigners.
But Thai authorities have avoided linking the August attacks to the southern militants.
Critics have accused the junta of professing support for a peace process but refusing to consider devolving any political power to the region -- a key pillar of the rebels' demands.
The junta "appears interested primarily in mere semblance of dialogue," said a report published this week by International Crisis Group.
The talks have also been hampered by disunity among the shadowy insurgent network, the report said, stressing that rebels' negotiators have shown little ability to control fighters on the ground.
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