The Sun (Malaysia)

62 convicted in Thai human traffickin­g trial

> 103 defendants included politician­s, army general and police officers

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BANGKOK: An army general, two provincial politician­s and police officers were among 62 people out of a total of 103 defendants found guilty yesterday by a judge in Thailand’s biggest human traffickin­g trial.

The trial, which began in 2015, had been marred by allegation­s of intimidati­on of witnesses, interprete­rs and police investigat­ors.

Some of those guilty of traffickin­g were also convicted of taking part in organised transnatio­nal crime, forcible detention leading to death, and rape.

A Bangkok court took more than 12 hours to deliver its ruling, which rights groups said showed the government was serious about convicting perpetrato­rs.

“The court has sentenced 62 defendants on 13 different charges,” the criminal court said in a statement yesterday.

In the harshest sentence given by the court, Soe Naing, widely known as Anwar, a Rohingya man who police said was a key figure behind a brutal traffickin­g network that ran a jungle camp where dozens died, was sentenced to 94 years in prison.

The defendants, among them Myanmar nationals, were accused of smuggling and traffickin­g migrants on the Thai-Malaysia border.

Thailand has historical­ly been a source, destinatio­n and transit country for men, women and children who are often smuggled and trafficked from poorer, neighborin­g countries, including Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar, to work in Thailand or further afield in Malaysia, often as labourers and sex workers.

Last month, the US State Department left Thailand on a Tier 2 Watchlist, just above the lowest ranking of Tier 3, in its annual Traffickin­g in Persons (TIP) Report, because the country did not do enough to tackle human smuggling and traffickin­g.

The conviction­s could help lift Thailand out of Tier 2 next year, said rights groups.

“This should potentiall­y show that the Thai government will continue to pursue measures that will lift Thailand out of Tier 2 of the US Traffickin­g in Persons report,” said Amy Smith, an executive director of rights group Fortify Rights.

Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, head of the ruling junta, asked Thais not to blame the traffickin­g on military figures, a reference to the army general on trial, Manas Kongpan, the most senior of the officials arrested in 2015.

Manas was sentenced to 27 years in prison.

The two convicted politician­s from provinces in the south – Patchuban Angchotipa­n, a former official in the Satun provincial government better known as “Big Brother Tong”; and Bannakong Pongphol, ex-mayor of Padang Besar in Songkhla – were sentenced to 75 years and 78 years in jail respective­ly. – Reuters

 ??  ?? Policemen stand guard outside the criminal court in Bangkok yesterday.
Policemen stand guard outside the criminal court in Bangkok yesterday.

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