Authorities in Thailand uncovered a mass grave in an abandoned jungle
camp Friday believed to contain the remains of migrants from Myanmar
and Bangladesh, a grisly find in a region notorious for people smuggling
routes.
The discovery was made at a remote jungle camp in Sadao district, in
Songkhla province bordering Malaysia, and comes as Thailand’s junta says
it is cracking down on the scourge of human trafficking.
The border area with Malaysia is notorious for its network of secret
camps where smuggled migrants are held, usually against their will until
relatives pay up hefty ransoms.
“There are 32 graves, four bodies have now been exhumed and are on
their way… to hospital for an autopsy,” Sathit Thamsuwan, a rescue
worker who was at the scene soon after the site was found, told AFP,
saying it was unclear how they had died.
“The bodies were all decayed,” he said, adding a single emaciated man
from Bangladesh survived and was being treated at a hospital in nearby
Padang Besar.
National police chief General Somyot Poompanmoung described the site
as a virtual “prison camp” where migrants were held in makeshift bamboo
cells.
“There are 32 places that look like graves and whether there is one
body or several bodies in those graves, we will we have to wait and
see,” he said.
He said the smugglers were believed to have abandoned the sick man
when they moved Rohingya migrants across the border into Malaysia two
days ago.
© AFP / by Anusak Konglang | Rescue
workers and forensic officials inspect the site of a mass grave
uncovered at an abandoned jungle camp in the Sadao district of
Thailand’s southern Songkhla province bordering Malaysia on May 1, 2015
Local media said the camp and its lone survivor were stumbled upon by villagers looking for mushrooms.
The local hospital confirmed the Bangladeshi man had survived and was in a stable condition.
A senior official from Sadao said exhumations had now stopped pending the arrival of forensic teams.
– Dangerous crossings –
Tens of thousands of migrants from Myanmar — mainly from the Rohingya
Muslim minority — and increasingly from Bangladesh make the dangerous
sea crossing to southern Thailand, a well worn trafficking route often
on the way south to Malaysia and beyond.
Thousands of Rohingya — described by the UN as one of the world’s
most persecuted minorities — have fled deadly communal unrest in western
Myanmar’s Rakhine state since 2012.
Chris Lewa, from the Arakan Project, which monitors the smuggling
routes, said survivors of jungle camps often described horrific
conditions as they waited for relatives to pay ransoms.
“If police find a camp and start digging you can bet they will find graves,” she told AFP.
Thailand has been criticised in the past for pushing boatloads of
Rohingya entering Thai waters back out to sea and for holding migrants
in overcrowded facilities.
The ruling junta says it has taken significant steps to combat
trafficking since June, when the United States dumped Thailand to the
bottom of its list of countries accused of failing to tackle modern-day
slavery.
In January, Thai authorities confirmed more than a dozen government
officials — including senior policemen and a navy officer — were being
prosecuted for involvement or complicity in human trafficking.
Lewa said the junta’s crackdown had forced many Thai smugglers into
hiding, reducing the numbers held in jungle camps in recent months.
But smugglers have simply switched tactics, she said, keeping desperate migrants in rickety boats at sea for endless weeks.
“We fear there may be thousands stuck at sea because they can’t
disembark. The camps have effectively been transferred from the jungle
to international waters,” she said.
Two weeks ago she interviewed a 15-year-old boy who had made it to Malaysia.
Rather than hold him in a Thai jungle camp, he was kept for six weeks on a boat, awaiting payment from his relatives.
“During his time at sea he said he saw at least 30 people die. They were thrown overboard,” she said.
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