The Citizen (KZN)

General guilty of traffickin­g

THAILAND: TRAGEDY OF DEATH CAMPS UNFOLDS Rare conviction of senior military officer in country ruled by junta.

- Bangkok

AThai general was found guilty of human traffickin­g yesterday as a Bangkok court convicted scores of people in a mass trial exposing the lynchpin role of corrupt officials in the grim, lucrative trade in Rohingya and Bangladesh­i migrants.

Thailand’s junta launched a crackdown in May 2015 on a network funnelling desperate migrants through southern Thailand and onto Malaysia, holding some for ransom in jungle camps.

It unspooled a crisis across Southeast Asia as gangmaster­s abandoned their human cargo in the camps where hundreds died from starvation and malaria, and at sea in overcrowde­d boats which were then “ping-ponged” between Thai, Malaysian and Indonesian waters.

After a day delivering verdicts for many of the 102 defendants, Bangkok Criminal Court found Lieutenant-General Manas Kongpan guilty of multiple human traffickin­g charges. A judge said he was also guilty of complicity in a “transnatio­nal organised crime” network and “worked with others to facilitate human traffickin­g”.

The ruling is an extremely rare conviction for a senior army officer in junta-ruled Thailand.

Manas, the highest-ranking official on trial, was a top figure in the security apparatus covering Thailand’s south – a key transit zone in a traffickin­g trail that stretched from Myanmar to Malaysia.

The court heard he received bank transfers from traffickin­g agents worth 14.8 million baht (R56.7 million).

But the police investigat­ion found he also used his position to guide traffickin­g gangs around checkpoint­s after their arrival on remote beaches as they headed to the jungle camps.

In 2013, he was promoted to head the Internal Security Command for the entire south. Current junta leader Prayut ChanO-Cha was army chief at the time.

The trial has revealed a lattice of military, police, local political and mafia figures acting as trafficker­s, agents and logistics men. – AFP

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