Yahoo - AFP, Anusak
Konglang, 2 June 2015
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Thai rescue
workers bring coffins containing the human remains of migrants
exhumed from a
jungle camp in the southern Songkhla province, on May 3,
2015 (AFP
Photo/Madaree Tohlala)
|
Thai
authorities Tuesday said an arrest warrant has been issued for a high-ranking
army officer over human trafficking, the first military figure in junta-ruled
Thailand to be implicated in the grim trade in migrants from Myanmar and
Bangladesh.
The
announcement comes a day after US President Barack Obama called on Myanmar to
end discrimination against its minority Rohingya Muslim population, as the once
pariah nation is widely viewed as catalysing their mass exodus.
![]() |
The current
migrant crisis was sparked
by a Thai police crackdown on human
traffickers
after mass graves were
found close to the border with Malaysia
(AFP
Photo/Madaree Tohlala)
|
More than
3,500 hungry and bedraggled Rohingya, as well as Bangladeshi migrants escaping
poverty, have arrived on Thai, Malaysian and Indonesian soil in recent weeks
after a trafficking crackdown by Thailand threw long-worn people-smuggling
routes into disarray.
Rights
groups have long accused Thai officials of turning a blind eye to -- or even
complicity in -- the trade of migrants through its southern provinces and into
Malaysia, but until now no military personnel have been implicated.
A court on
Sunday issued an arrest warrant for Lieutenant General Manas Kongpan for his
involvement in human trafficking, according to Thai national police chief
Somyot Poompanmoung.
"Police
are confident in the evidence (against him)," Somyot told reporters in
Bangkok, but declining to give further details of Manas' alleged role in a
multi-million dollar smuggling network.
Buddhist
Myanmar's treatment of the Rohingya has drawn international condemnation, with
critics accusing authorities of driving the Muslim minority out of the country
by denying most of them citizenship and restricting everything from travel to
employment.
On Monday
Obama threw his political weight behind calls for Myanmar to address its role
in the migrant exodus in his latest comments on the plight of the ethnic group.
"The
Rohingya have been discriminated against significantly, and that's part of the
reason they're fleeing," Obama said in Washington at an event with young
leaders from Southeast Asia.
He also
said that ending this discrimination was essential if Myanmar, which will hold
landmark elections later this year, wanted "to succeed" in its
transition to democracy.
No
protection for wrongdoers
The current
migrant crisis was sparked by a Thai police crackdown on trafficking after the
discovery of dozens of shallow graves in the country's south on May 1 in a
remote migrant camp bordering Malaysia.
The find
threw well-established trafficking routes into chaos with smugglers abandoning
their human cargo in the Andaman Sea and Bay of Bengal -- an estimated 2,500
migrants are still believed to be stranded at sea.
Thailand's
military suspect Manas, 58, was a long-serving army officer in Thailand's
south, the focal area of the trafficking probe.
According
to the Royal Thai Army website Manas was the commander of the upper south
province of Chumpon in 2013, before taking a senior position in Songkhla, which
borders Malaysia.
He was
moved this year to the Royal Thai Army Headquarters in Bangkok to act as an
adviser -- although it was not immediately clear in what capacity.
The army
suspended Manas on Tuesday and launched an internal probe into the allegations
after intially ruling out the possible involvement of the military in the
migrant scandal.
The arrest
warrant also raises awkward questions for junta chief Prayut Chan-O-Cha, who
has repeatedly justified his coup last year as a much-needed antidote to graft
that he says had flourished under a series of elected civilian governments.
When
questioned about possible wider military involvement in trafficking following
the allegations against Manas, Prayut said he was unaware of other cases.
"I
don't know. I am not the investigator," he told reporters in Bangkok
Tuesday, but added: "Wrong is wrong. Let justice take its course. I will
not interfere."
Thai police
have so far arrested 51 people over the scandal, including senior local
officials, with warrants out for 33 others.
Rights
groups say the real money was made in southern Thailand, where brokers held the
human cargo in jungle camps or safe houses awaiting release payments of around
$2,000 from relatives or friends, or sold them on in bulk to farms and
businesses in Malaysia.




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