Thailand calls for Myanmar, Malaysia help in halting trafficking

By AFP
10 May 2015
Thailand calls for Myanmar, Malaysia help in halting trafficking
Suspected ethnic Rohingya migrants from Myanmar and Bangladesh rest as they were detained at the district hall in Rattaphum district, Songkhla province southern Thailand, 09 May 2015. Photo: EPA

Thailand's junta chief has called for Myanmar and Malaysia’s help in stamping out the region's thriving human trafficking trade as the UN warned migrant crossings in the Bay of Bengal have dramatically spiked.
Thai Prime Minister Prayutt Chan-ocha said May 8 he is seeking a three-way meeting with the neighbouring countries before the end of May following the discovery of remains from dozens of migrants in southern Thailand.
In recent years tens of thousands of Rohingya Muslims, mainly from Myanmar but also more recently from Bangladesh, have braved the dangerous sea crossing to southern Thailand, with many headed for Malaysia and beyond.
The recent discovery of migrant graves and a network of secret jungle camps run by people smugglers in Thailand's deep south has embarrassed the kingdom and highlighted its central role in a grim trade in which officials have long been accused of complicity. 
"We are the middle country, what should we do?" Prayuth told reporters. 
"They (the migrants) have to pass Thailand on the way. But the third country doesn't want to accept them (either)," he added.
Prayuth, who took over in a coup nearly a year ago, suggested officials across the region were benefiting from the trade. 
"There have been evil people as well as the authorities. But without the authorities joining in, it wouldn't happen," he said, adding corrupt officials should be "got rid of".
His comments came as the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said an estimated 25,000 Rohingya and Bangladeshis have taken to boats in the first three months of this year -- double the number over the same period in 2014.
"Based on survivor accounts, we estimate that 300 people died at sea in the first quarter of 2015 as a result of starvation, dehydration and abuse by boat crews," the refugee agency said in a statement Friday.
- 'Beatings, executions and rapes' - 
The UN added that the most common route used by gangs was to ferry migrants by boat to Ranong province in southern Thailand and drive them by road to a network of hidden camps on the southern border with Malaysia. 
"Conditions in the smugglers' camp are horrific," the statement read. 
"Beatings are common and there are reports of rapes. Those who try to escape risk being shot."
Highlighting the regional nature of trafficking, Bangladesh police on Friday said three people-smugglers were gunned down by officers in a border region close to Myanmar.
Officials accused the men of smuggling thousands of people in recent years via networks that spread into Myanmar and Thailand.
A day earlier labour rights group Tenaganita said interviews with survivors indicated Malaysians were also involved in human smuggling and ran secret prison camps.
Authorities in Kuala Lumpur have yet to respond to the allegations.
The discovery of the skeleton-filled graves at remote jungle camps on Thailand's southern border with Malaysia was made during a recent crackdown that comes at a crucial time for the kingdom. 
Last summer the US relegated Thailand to the bottom of its list of countries failing to tackle modern-day slavery. 
The next State Department report on human trafficking is expected imminently and Thailand has lobbied Washington against its inclusion in the lowest tier, insisting it is now clamping down.
Regional police official Major General Puthichart Ekachant told AFP nine people have now been arrested in the last week on suspicion of running people smuggling rackets, including a senior municipal official in Padang Besar who turned himself in on Friday. 
More than 50 police officers, including senior officials, have been transferred from their posts for complicity or turning a blind eye to the trade.
Meanwhile dozens of suspected migrants have been rounded up in southern Thailand, some of whom were abandoned by smugglers. 
Police in Songkhla province Friday told AFP 65 suspected Bangladeshis had been discovered near a rubber plantation in Rattaphum district trying to make their way to Malaysia.
© AFP