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Thai nationals charged with human trafficking over 2015 mass graves discovery

They face up to 15 years in jail if found guilty.

AFP
2 minute read
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This photo taken on May 28, 2015 shows police personnel walking towards the dense jungle area in Wang Kelian that leads to an abandoned migrant camp, where some 37 graves were detected in Perlis, which borders Thailand. Photo: AFP
This photo taken on May 28, 2015 shows police personnel walking towards the dense jungle area in Wang Kelian that leads to an abandoned migrant camp, where some 37 graves were detected in Perlis, which borders Thailand. Photo: AFP

A court in Perlis charged four Thai nationals with human trafficking of migrants today over the discovery eight years ago of mass graves near the country's border with Thailand.

More than 100 bodies were discovered buried deep in the jungle in 2015, triggering an investigation into human trafficking in the country.

The four men, aged between 30 and 58, were charged under the anti-trafficking in persons and anti-smuggling of migrants law.

The men are alleged to have been involved in the trafficking between 2013 and 2015, and face up to 15 years in jail if found guilty, according to court documents.

After being extradited to Malaysia yesterday, the suspects will be held in a prison in Kangar ahead of their next court appearance on July 25.

The men, wearing white T-shirts and chained together, were brought to a court in Kangar, which borders Thailand, near where the graves and trafficking camps were found.

The suspects were among 10 Thai nationals that Malaysia had sought for since 2017 as part of an investigation into the border camps.

The region, known for its porous border, has long been a gateway for persecuted Rohingya Muslims fleeing violence in their native Myanmar and economic migrants from Bangladesh.

Smugglers have in previous years brought tens of thousands of Rohingya on a perilous journey over land and sea to Malaysia.

One of Southeast Asia's countries richest countries, Malaysia depends heavily on cheap foreign workers from Indonesia, Bangladesh and Myanmar for its construction, plantations and services sectors.

A 2019 report by Malaysian human rights commissioners and a rights group said a human smuggling syndicate operated in the area from 2012 to 2015.

Migrants were reportedly held in inhumane jungle camps where they faced physical violence and were often denied adequate access to food and water.

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