The discovery of more than 30 bodies in a human trafficking camp should
prompt Thai authorities to authorize an independent, United
Nations-assisted investigation, commit to publish its findings, and
bring those responsible to justice, including any government officials
involved, Human Rights Watch said today. The UN and others, including
the United States, that have called for an end to trafficking in
Thailand should urgently press the government to end official
complicity and willful blindness in rampant trafficking in the country.
On May 1, 2015, a joint military-police taskforce discovered at least
30 bodies at an abandoned human trafficking camp in the Sadao district
of Songkhla province close to the Thai-Malaysian border. Many were
buried in shallow graves, while others were covered with blankets and
clothes and left in the open. Police reports indicate the dead are
ethnic Rohingya Muslims from Burma and Bangladesh who starved to death
or died of disease while held by traffickers who were awaiting payment
of ransoms before smuggling them into Malaysia. Traffickers controlling
this camp apparently departed into the mountainous jungle, taking
surviving Rohingya with them. “Trafficking of persons in Thailand has
long been out of control, something that senior officials have admitted
to Human Rights Watch and others,” said Brad Adams, Asia director. “The
finding of a mass grave at a trafficking camp sadly comes as little
surprise. The long involvement of Thai officials in trafficking means
that an independent investigation with UN involvement is necessary to
uncover the truth and hold those responsible to account.” For years,
human rights organizations and investigative journalists have reported
on the thriving human trafficking networks that operate with support
and protection from corrupt officials in southern Thailand. Last year,
the US State Department downgraded Thailand to the worst possible
rating – tier 3 – on its 2014 Trafficking in Persons Report, for
failing to combat human trafficking. Rohingya fleeing abuses,
persecution, and hardship in Burma’s Arakan State or Bangladesh are
often trafficked and abused by networks working with official
protection, while in other cases victims simply receive little
protection from Thai authorities. Rohingya who are apprehended in
Thailand are treated as “illegal immigrants” subject to deportation
without regard to the threats facing them in Burma. Rohingya men are
sometimes detained in overcrowded immigration detention facilities
across the country, while women and children have been sent to shelters
operated by the Ministry of Social Development and Human Security. Many
more are believed to be transferred through corrupt arrangements into
the hands of human trafficking gangs where they face cruel treatment
and no prospect of assistance from Thai authorities. As with previous
Thai governments, the military junta of Prime Minister Gen. Prayuth
Chan-ocha does not permit the office of the UN High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR) to properly conduct refugee status determination
screenings of Rohingya. “Each year, tens of thousands of Rohingya flee
the dire human rights situation in Burma only to be further abused and
exploited at the hands of traffickers in Thailand,” Adams said. “The
discovery of these mass graves should shock the Thai government into
shutting down the trafficking networks that enrich officials but prey
on extremely vulnerable people. Instead of sticking Rohingya in border
camps or immigration lockups, the government should provide safety and
protection.
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