The Borneo Post

Rise and fall of Manas: Thailand’s top trafficker

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He was involved in such an obvious way...at a time when the junta was really trying to show themselves to be clean. Paul Chambers, an expert on Thailand’s military

BANGKOK: An army ‘Big Shot’ whose influence seeped across the south, Lieutenant- General Manas Kongpan sat at the apex of Thailand’s grisly trade in humans, raking in an untold fortune to keep prying eyes off the traffickin­g route. As the number of desperate Rohingya and Bangladesh­is shuttled through the traffickin­g operation shot up, so did Manas’ rank in the Thai military. Butthesilv­er-hairedgene­ral was condemned to 27 years in prison on Wednesday for profiting from the trade, an extraordin­arily rare conviction of a senior member of an army that dominates the kingdom. The 61-yearold’s downfall was hastened in 2015 after investigat­ors uncovered secret jungle prisons in the south where trafficker­s starved and tortured migrants while holding them for ransom. The discovery exposed Thailand’s horrifying role in a criminal operation that shifted victims from Myanmar to Malaysia, and forced the ruling junta to launch a belated crackdown. Police followed a money trail that lead straight to Manas, an army hardliner with a passion for bullfighti­ng. “He was involved in such an obvious way...at a time when the junta was really trying to show themselves to be clean,” said Paul Chambers, an expert on Thailand’s military. “He is going down because he was at the wrong place at the wrong time.”

Manas was first highlighte­d as a suspect in early 2015 after 98 famished Rohingya were found in trucks in Nakhon Si Thammarat, stopped by a random police checkpoint.

Provincial police – aided by antitraffi­cking NGO Freeland – used the drivers’ cell phones to trace their regular route.

The trail carved through Thailand’s southern neck from coastal Ranong, where boatloads of migrants arrived from Myanmar, to malaria-infested camps near the Malaysian border, where they were held in appalling conditions.

Phone and e-banking records from the drivers led to key trafficker Sunan Saengthong, a Ranong politician and businessma­n who had deposited nearly US$ 600,000 in accounts belonging to Manas.

In May 2015 police found more bank slips revealing that Sunan’s nephew had also transferre­d huge sums to Manas, including some 400,000 in just over a month.

Sunan was jailed for 35 years in a separate trial but his nephew Nattaphat Saengthong and others remain at large.

Around the time of the money transfers, Manas served as a top commander of Thailand’s southern security arm.

His job was to enforce its controvers­ial ‘push-back’ policy – which meant turning around boats of stateless Rohingya who were trying to flee persecutio­n in Myanmar.

But he used this position to do just the opposite, according to last week’s verdict, which exposed a matrix of collusion between state officials and businessme­n who profited from traffickin­g.

Witnesses said Manas instructed officers to force back a boat of 265 Rohingya in 2012 – only to covertly re-route the ship to shore and truck the human cargo south to the jungle prisons.

Manas “had direct responsibl­ity in the push-back mission and must have been part of this human traffickin­g network, otherwise the Rohingya would not have been able to return to Thailand so quickly,” the verdict read.

The traffickin­g operation flourished until the 2015 crackdown, with tens of thousands of victims funnelled through a trade worth an estimated US$ 250 million.

Many were lured from the Myanmar-Bangladesh border by brokers who promised jobs, while others were violently kidnapped and forced onto the boats.

The big money was made in Thailand, where jungle camp wardens phoned relatives of the weakest migrants and threatened to kill them if they didn’t send more cash.

The young and strong were sold off as labour to Malaysian palm oil plantation­s or fishing boats, according to Freeland.

All the while, Manas’ seemingly inexorable rise up the army ranks continued, with his command stretching over increasing­ly large chunks of the south.

Months before his arrest in 2015, he was promoted to Lt-General and given the sweeping role of ‘military advisor’. — AFP

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 ??  ?? This file photo shows Rohingya migrants passing food supplies dropped by a Thai army helicopter to others aboard a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea. An army ‘Big Shot’ whose influence seeped across the...
This file photo shows Rohingya migrants passing food supplies dropped by a Thai army helicopter to others aboard a boat drifting in Thai waters off the southern island of Koh Lipe in the Andaman sea. An army ‘Big Shot’ whose influence seeped across the...
 ??  ?? This file photo shows Lieutenant General Manas Kongpan, now convicted of involvemen­t in human traffickin­g, arriving at the criminal court in Bangkok. — AFP photo
This file photo shows Lieutenant General Manas Kongpan, now convicted of involvemen­t in human traffickin­g, arriving at the criminal court in Bangkok. — AFP photo

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