Business World

Bodies from Thai mass grave show no initial signs of violent death

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BANGKOK — Twenty-six bodies exhumed at a mass grave near a suspected human traffickin­g camp in southern Thailand do not bear signs of violent death, police said on Sunday, following initial forensic examinatio­ns at the site.

Dozens of police and rescue volunteers trekked into the mountains on Saturday to a jungle camp in Songkhla province that authoritie­s have linked to human traffickin­g and dug up 21 bodies.

Five bodies were retrieved on Friday from the camp, which is a few hundred meters from Thailand’s border with Malaysia, bringing the total to 26.

“From initial forensic investigat­ion at the site there are no marks on the bones or breakages that would suggest a violent death,” Police Colonel Triwit Sriprapa, deputy commander of Songkhla Provincial Police, told Reuters. “It is likely that they died from disease and malnutriti­on.”

The discovery of a camp hidden deep in the jungle in southern Thailand, a regional human traffickin­g hub, was a sharp reminder of the extent of human traffickin­g in the Southeast Asian country and comes as Thailand scrambles to improve its record in fighting the illegal trade.

Illegal migrants, many of them Rohingya Muslims from western Myanmar and Bangla- desh, brave often perilous journeys by sea to escape religious and ethnic persecutio­n and to seek jobs in Malaysia and Thailand.

Police are focusing their investigat­ion on a human traffickin­g network linked to the camp, said Police Colonel Anuchon Chamat, deputy commander of Nakorn Si Thammarat Provincial Police. “It is an ongoing investigat­ion but we have reason to believe that one suspect arrested in Nakorn Si Thammarat and his associates was directly linked to this camp,” he said.

Three survivors were found near the camp, including two aged 14 and 17. Police do not expect to find further bodies at the site, Triwit said.

“A witness said 30-40 people were brought to the camp at a time. The camp could have held up to 200 people,” Triwit said.

The Thai government said on Saturday it was determined to rid the country of human traffickin­g. Prime Minister Prayuth Chanocha has acknowledg­ed the complicity of some Thai authoritie­s in smuggling people.

Last year, Thailand was downgraded to the US State Department’s lowest category — or Tier 3 — in its annual Traffickin­g in Persons Report, which assesses how government­s around the world have performed in fighting human traffickin­g. —

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