The Borneo Post

Thai police hunting for suspected human smugglers

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BANGKOK: Thai police said yesterday they were hunting for suspected human smugglers who deserted 35 Myanmar nationals in southern Thailand, a key stop on a regional traffickin­g route.

The 28 men and 7 women were found in Thailand’s Nakhon Si Thammarat province on Friday without passports or proper visas, provincial police commander Wancha Akepornpic­h told AFP.

They were bound for Malaysia where they had been promised work on rubber and palm plantation­s.

“Their driver told them to wait while he went to go buy meals, but then he fled,” Akepornpic­h said.

The officer told AFP the men and women were not Rohingya, a Muslim minority that has fled Myanmar in droves to escape persecutio­n.

The group told Thai police they crossed overland into western Thailand before travelling south by truck.

That route has become more popular since Thai authoritie­s clamped down on traffickin­g gangs who for years ferried tens of thousands of Myanmar refugees and migrants across the Bay of Bengal by boat.

Before crossing into Malaysia, the traffickin­g victims were often held in Thai jungle camps where they were beaten, raped and abused until relatives paid release ransoms.

The dangerous sea crossings have slowed dramatical­ly since the 2015 crackdown, according to a recent report by the UN’s refugee agency.

The UNHCR said there were rumours of “isolated attempts” but no confirmed maritime arrivals in 2016.

However more than 100 Myanmar people — half of whom were Rohingya — were caught by authoritie­s attempting overland travel to Malaysia, it said.

Thailand’s belated crackdown led to the prosecutio­n of more than 80 traffickin­g suspects, including local officials and a senior army general.

Yet their ongoing trial has been closed off to the media, raising concerns about transparen­cy.

While the movement of Rohingya through Thailand has slowed to a trickle, some 75,000 of the ethnic minority have fled west to Bangladesh since October.

The mass exodus was spurred by a bloody military crackdown in the north of Rakhine state, where the nearly one-million strong Rohingya are based. — AFP

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? An illegal migrant from Myanmar is pictured at Tha Sala police station in Nakorn Si Thammarat province in Thailand.
— Reuters photo An illegal migrant from Myanmar is pictured at Tha Sala police station in Nakorn Si Thammarat province in Thailand.

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