Bangkok Post

Migrant graves ruling fells kingpins

Court convicts former army, local leaders

- POST REPORTERS

The Criminal Court yesterday handed down a lengthy ruling in a major human traffickin­g trial with 103 accused over their role in the traffickin­g of Rohingya migrants to jungle camps in the South.

It is believed to be the country’s biggest human traffickin­g case ever tried in court.

By late afternoon the court had convicted 21 people of charges ranging from traffickin­g to collaborat­ion in organised transnatio­nal crime to detention. The court was still reading the ruling at press time last night.

Former army adviser Lt Gen Manas Kongpan was among those found guilty of several offences involving traffickin­g and taking bribes.

The court said Lt Gen Manas could not prove evidence of claims that he had earned 14 million baht over the past two years from gambling on bullfighti­ng, and receiving legal payments for dealing with the Rohingya migrant problem.

Banchong Pongphon, or Ko Chong, the mayor of Padang Besar, and Patchuban Angchotpha­n, or Ko Tong, ex-head of Satun provincial administra­tion, were also convicted.

The defendants were arrested in a massive crackdown following the discovery of more than 30 graves in May, 2015 on top of Khao Kaew mountain in tambon Padang Besar in Songkhla’s Sadao district near the Thai-Malaysian border.

The bodies, found close to a makeshift camp, were suspected Rohingya Muslim migrants who were possibly victims of human traffickin­g.

Among the key defendants were Lt Gen Manas, ex-commander of the 42nd Military Circle in Songkhla, accused of traffickin­g humans, helping foreigners enter the country illegally, detaining victims of human traffickin­g and demanding a ransom; Mr Banchong; and Mr Patchuban.

The case came under the media spotlight, putting pressure on the government already under close watch by the internatio­nal community for its inefficien­cy in combating human traffickin­g.

The court spent more than 10 hours reading out a 500-page document detailing the defendants’ crimes amid tight security.

The ruling started at 8.30am while friends and families of the defendants started arriving as early as 6am.

In its ruling, the court found there was insufficie­nt food and water at the camp where the detainees were kept. The detainees were not allowed to use phones and were threatened if they tried to contact anyone.

According to the court, the defendants who were local officials, including Mr Banchong, were involved in labour procuremen­t and their activities involved traffickin­g of people and involvemen­t in cross-border crime syndicates.

The court also found that another group of defendants responsibl­e for providing transporta­tion and securing routes were part of the traffickin­g network even though they claimed they did not know they were transporti­ng people.

The court cited the records of their mobile use as evidence to implicate them.

The suspects were indicted in July 2015 on 16 counts of violating the 2008 AntiTraffi­cking in Persons Act, the 2003 Suppressio­n of Participat­ion in Transnatio­nal Networked Criminal Organisati­on Act, the immigratio­n law and the Criminal Code.

Following the indictment, the defendants pleaded not guilty and none were granted bail throughout the trial which concluded in February this year.

The trial was moved from Na Thawi court in the South to the Criminal Court’s newly establishe­d human traffickin­g division.

One of the defendants, Sureeya Ahamad, died during a trial which included 116 hearings, and 200 witnesses.

Some of the defendants’ witnesses were granted permission to give testimony behind closed doors as their statements concerned national security.

The defendants were asked to submit their closing statements within 30 days of the last hearing in February as the court set July 19 for its ruling.

Only the defendants and their lawyers and correction officials were allowed in the room where the ruling was read out. Families and friends and the media were put in separate rooms for security reasons.

The proceeding­s were relayed on television screens provided by the court.

More than 60 police from the Crime Suppressio­n Division (CSD) were deployed in the court’s compound to step up security.

Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha yesterday called on the people not to blame military figures for the traffickin­g, saying Lt Gen Manas was just one part of the network.

He said the media seemed to focus attention on military personnel.

“There are many people in this human traffickin­g network,” Gen Prayut told reporters yesterday. “Don’t group all soldiers in the country as one.”

Pol Maj Gen Chalong Phakpinyo, deputy commission­er of Provincial Police 9, said police are still working on the human traffickin­g case and tracking down suspects who are wanted on another 45 warrants.

He said several suspects are foreigners believed to have fled the country.

He said the bureau has been working closely with Malaysian authoritie­s in fighting human traffickin­g through exchanges of informatio­n.

Vice Adm Surapol Khuptaphan, commander of the 3rd Fleet, said traffickin­g of Rohingya migrants has subsided.

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