Millennium Post

Thai court muzzles media as traffickin­g defence begins

-

BANGKOK: Dozens of people including a general arrested in Thailand’s crackdown on human traffickin­g appeared in court on Tuesday to begin presenting their defence but journalist­s were barred from reporting trial proceeding­s.

The kingdom has long been a major hub for human traffickin­g and people-smuggling, with officials accused of turning a blind eye and even of complicity.

Thailand’s junta launched a belated crackdown in 2015, a move that uncovered grim camps on the Thai-malaysia border and led to dozens of arrests.

But it also led to the sudden closure of the traffickin­g route, leaving thousands of people -mainly Rohingya migrants from Myanmar and Bangladesh - abandoned by gangmaster­s on land and at sea.more than 80 suspects, including local officials and senior army general Manas Kongpan, packed into a chamber at Bangkok’s main criminal courton Tuesday for the opening of their defence on an array of human traffickin­g charges.

Reporters watched proceeding­s on a television screen in a side room.

But they were told by court officials that any reporting of what was said at the trial had been banned since the start of proceeding­s last year. No reason was given for the decision.

Thailand’s generals seized power in 2014. Secret court hearings have since become more commonplac­e, particular­ly in military tribunals and for royal defamation prosecutio­ns.

But it is rare for such restrictio­ns to be placed on a criminal trial.

The alleged involvemen­t of senior military officers in the trade is an incendiary topic given that the ruling junta proudly shows off its anti-corruption credential­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India