The Borneo Post

Over 50 Thai police punished over links to human traffickin­g

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BANGKOK: More than 50 Thai police officers have been punished over suspected links to human traffickin­g networks, the country's police chief said yesterday, after the prime minister ordered a probe into the discovery of traffickin­g camps near the Malaysian border.

Thirty-two bodies, believed to be migrants from Myanmar and Bangladesh, have been found in shallow graves over the past week in the southern province of Songkhla. Some of the bodies were found at a suspected human traffickin­g camp hidden deep in the jungle.

“We have transferre­d over 50 police officers over this issue because commanders in local areas know who has been involved in what,” Chief of Royal Thai Police General Somyot Poompanmua­ng told reporters ahead of a meeting in Bangkok to discuss efforts to crack down on the illicit trade.

“In the past there were no sincere efforts to solve this problem. This is only something that has happened recently.” Some Thai officials say human traffickin­g has been allowed to flourish for years amid indifferen­ce and, sometimes, complicity by Thai authoritie­s.

Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha has ordered a clean up of suspected human traffickin­g camps around the country within 10 days, while UN officials have called for a regional effort to end the illicit trade.

Thailand was not to blame for the crisis, said Prayuth.

“This problem comes from abroad and not from us. To solve it we must look to the source because we are merely a transit country,” he said. — Reuters

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