Cape Times

Thailand ends traffickin­g crackdown

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BANGKOK: Thai police said yesterday they had “shown sincerity” and wrapped up the country’s biggest investigat­ion into human traffickin­g, as rights groups questioned whether they had even scratched the surface.

Thailand began a crackdown on traffickin­g networks and suspected camps, hidden deep in its jungle-carpeted mountains, last month following the discovery of more than 30 bodies buried in camps in the south.

Police have arrested 56 suspects – including politician­s, police, government officials, businessme­n and an army general – and issued arrest warrants for 63.

Aek Angsananon­t, police deputy commission­er-general, called the probe “the biggest human traffickin­g investigat­ion in Thailand’s history”.

Around 1 000 police officers, many of them based in southern Thailand, took part in the investigat­ion, Aek said, without elaboratin­g on any ongoing or future probes.

Police have sent 19 cases filled with more than 100 000 document sheets to the office of the attorney-general, which will have until July 24 to decide whether to file charges, Aek said.

“This government has shown its sincerity in solving this problem by seriously tackling human traffickin­g and by dealing with those involved,” Aek said. But rights groups, including the New York-based Human Rights Watch, said the investigat­ion would not put an end to networks operating in the region.

“It is highly likely that if this investigat­ion turns out to just be window dressing to defuse internatio­nal pressure, then it will have no impact,” said Sunai Phasuk, Thailand researcher at Human Rights Watch.

“It will just put them undergroun­d for the time being and then resurface again.”

The UN estimates 1 200 people are still at sea or unaccounte­d for, while more than 3 000 have landed since May in Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia.

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