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The second camp, where villagers say many more bodies are buried

Second Thai Jungle Hellcamp Contains More Bodies, Villagers Tell Searchers

Sunday, May 3, 2015
PHUKET: Villagers may soon lead authorities to another traffickers' jungle camp in southern Thailand holding even more bodies than the 26 uncovered in the first over two days of digging.

A reliable source told Phuketwan today: ''There could be more than 50 graves in the second camp, and there are other camps with smaller numbers of buried bodies scattered near the border.''

The bodies are the legacy of years of human trafficking, with local villagers in southern Thailand and along the Andaman coast either benefitting from the horrendous trade in people or turning a blind eye to it.

Authorities wishing to trap the traffickers have seldom had much success because vast networks of helpers always provided warnings when raids were being undertaken.

What the raiders nearly always found in the discarded jungle camps were groups of lame Rohingya and Bangladeshi boatpeople, too sick or injured to travel.

The graves found over the past couple of days on the hillside near Pedang Besar, within 300 metres of the border with Malaysia, are dramatic evidence of the nightmarish existence of the boatpeople, abused in their hundreds to extract ransoms from relatives or friends.

Many more graves exist at hidden camps across the south and north of Phuket along the Andaman coast in Phang Nga and Ranong, where for years boats from Burma (Myanmar) and Bangladesh delivered men, women and children to so-called ''brokers''.

Finally this week, the world's mainstream media began to pay attention because of the number of bodies on the hillside of horror.

Many more are buried, Phuketwan was told today, on other hillsides on the same mountain.

For years Thailand's Immigration Division 6 Commander, Police Major General Thatchai Pitaneelaboot, has been conducting raids on camps that mostly came up empty, except for discarded boatpeople.

The discovery of the large camp, hidden deep in the jungle, came this week with the arrest of a trafficker named Anwar. Anwar is thought to be one of southern Thailand's most significant traffickers.

''The brokers' networks throughout the villages have always acted to warn them of raids in the past,'' Major General Thatchai said. ''But we believe the cycle is reversing now and more people are beginning to understand that trading in people is morally wrong, and abhorrent.''

Even reports in Phuketwan of rapes and murders by traffickers on mangrove-covered islands off Phang Nga or in the jungles along the Thai-Malaysia border have failed to provoke an official reaction.

Now, it seems, the bodies in the jungle are likely to trigger firm action from Bangkok and sway popular opinion in the villages where trafficking has become a lucrative cottage industry.

Drug dealers have converted to ''brokers'' in human beings because the profits were much larger and there were no penalties.

Local police were always reluctant to declare that boatpeople were human trafficking victims, taking instead the easy way out, defining them as illegal immigrants and having them trucked back to the Burma-Thai border.

The tide against trafficking began turning on the ground along the Andaman coast last year, when Manit Pleantong, the district chief of the Takuapa district, north of Phuket, set up a 24-hour human trafficking checkpoint on the main road south.

Authorities now acknowledge that Khun Manit's volunteers have played a key role in changing the minds of local villagers about trafficking and driving the ''brokers'' to other parts of the Andaman coast.

The mystery is how hundreds of Rohingya and Bangladeshis are trucked from the coast to the jungle camps of southern Thailand without being detected along the way by police or the Army.

Now the concern is growing that pressure being mounted in Thailand against trading in people is forcing the human traffickers to hold their captives in boats at sea.

Just like the camps in the jungle, people in tight spaces on boats inevitably grow weak and die as the days of their confinement stretch into weeks, and months.

Unless family and friends raise the ransom, their fate is likely to be the same as the bodies removed this week from the jungle, except that disposing of bodies at sea is so much easier.

Comments

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too many 'ifs, buts & maybes' for my liking. At least the cat is out of the bag. Maybe the authorities should offer small rewards for more information. The scale of this horror show is liable to exceed belief. It may border on genocide.

Posted by Logic on May 3, 2015 09:30

Editor Comment:

The answer lies in Burma, where the issue is definitely ethnic cleansing. Stop the Burmese government pushing the Rohingya into the sea and Thailand's problem is solved.

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Dear Ed

I wish to express my congratulations once again to Khun Manit and his brave volunteers. It now seems that they are not only saving the victims of trafficking but also changing attitudes within Thailand.

Ed, do you think the release of the movie about human trafficking in Thailand did much to change attitudes?

Well done to you and Khun Chutima for your ongoing coverage of the battle against this disgusting trade.

Ian Yarwood
Solicitor - Perth, Western Australia

Posted by Ian Yarwood on May 3, 2015 09:44

Editor Comment:

The made-in-Thailand film certainly carries the message that profiting from trading in people is wrong and thousands of villagers saw it. Let's hope they were persuaded.

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"People are beginning to understand that trading in people is morally wrong, and abhorrent", a telling statement by a high ranking policeman about how people really think in this country. This nightmare starts in Burma but is enabled by fundamental flaws in society here in Thailand.

Posted by CaptainJack on May 3, 2015 11:24

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I wake up here and I read this.. We all know it is true.., but is disqusting. Thank you for bringing it foreward. I think like Ed. say its a problem for all, but most important it lies in Myanmar. Beyond word.. sorry.. I dont know what to say..

Posted by Chris on May 3, 2015 12:49

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"with local villagers in southern Thailand and along the Andaman coast either benefitting from the horrendous trade in people or turning a blind eye to it. "

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even more the same applicable to the local authorities , incl. of enforcement agencies, who are also part of those villagers, and they should be urgently "rotated" to or even destruction of various evidence and influencing withesses.

Posted by Sue on May 3, 2015 12:50

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I fully agree with Editor Comment.Burma is of course product of all these unforgivable humanitarian crisis.Our continue voices to crackdown hell trafficking was finally came in to action after hundreds of innocent lives lost at concentration death camps.We thanks to PW ,Khun Manik ,Police Major General Thatchai Pitaneelaboot and some others who continue work to end the trafficking. The Thai authorities are humbly requested not to grant bail to arrested traffickers.There are dozens of barbaric traffickers/brokers yet to be traced out. There are also hundreds of victims and mass graves scattered at secret hell camps in the south Thailand and adjacent remote areas in Malaysia. The floating hell camps are heard in the Andaman sea. Please come forwards to save the humanity!

Posted by Maung Kyawnu,BRAT. on May 3, 2015 14:21

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Dear Ed

Many of your readers are probably aware that this story unfolded at a time that coincided with Labour Day or International Workers' Day around the globe.

The readers can always offer some support to the victims of slavery and human trafficking simply by sending letters and/or emails to their elected representatives expressing concern for these victims. Improvements can be achieved if efforts are made by Thais and foreigners alike.

Posted by Ian Yarwood on May 3, 2015 18:33

Editor Comment:

Indeed. Sunday is also International Media Freedom Day. We thank the spirits of the dead and hope they did not suffer.

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Soon be doing trips of slave camps in Thailand can start in kanchanaburi and work your way down to the Malay border

Great this story is now getting mainstream worldwide coverage was interesting reading an interview with one of the 73 that landed in phuket in January they were not taken to ranong but transferred to smugglers vehicles about two hours north of phuket, surely the powers that be can easily identify the people involved in the transfer (source BBC)

Posted by Michael on May 3, 2015 18:46

Editor Comment:

Er, yes. Catching human traffickers is not easy. There appears to be a need for the person to have a tattoo saying ''I Am a Human Trafficker'' somewhere on their body. Otherwise, evidence is often insufficient. Large mansions, unexplained wealth and fleets of pickups in the yard do not seem to count.

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I read that it is a mystery how all these people could have been landed and trucked to illegal slavery camps over distances of hundreds of km's without being detected by police or army. Are you joking? Of course police and army have knowledge of all this. ( big problem for present general prime minister to solve!) So, readers, do your pick: If police and army knew, they violated their professional oath. If they didn't know it reflects their incompetence. Both options reflects something. But so many discoveries until now, but not yet a single thai official arrested. How long can this go on that way?

Posted by Kurt on May 3, 2015 20:16

Editor Comment:

There have been some officials charged with human trafficking in the statistics presented to the State Department but requests for lists of names, charges, times and places have never drawn a response. Transparency is required. Statistics must be verifiable.

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Simply horrific, and the rhetorical question in the article as to how these poor people get moved around sums it all up. A national shame on the beautiful country of Thailand.

Posted by Discover Thainess on May 3, 2015 22:28

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It seems that Thailand and Malaysia have to set up a bilateral platform to tackle together the trafficker camps issue on both side of the borders.

Posted by Kurt on May 4, 2015 08:54


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