Suspected trafficking ring leader surrenders to Thai police
Xinhua, May 12, 2015 Adjust font size:
An alleged leader of a human trafficking ring in southern Thailand surrendered himself to the police on Monday, local media reported.
Suwan Sangthong, a 66-year-old businessman who owns fishing piers in southern Ranong province, reported to deputy national police chief Aek Angsananont in Songkhla province, the Bangkok Post said.
Suwan is among some 50 people wanted by the police for suspected involvement in human trafficking in the southern part of the kingdom.
He faced charges of conspiracy to commit human trafficking, facilitating illegal entry of foreign migrants, illegal detention and ransom, but he denied all the charges.
The police have arrested 17 of the 50 wanted individuals and they are hunting down those still at large, according to Aek, who is heading an investigation into the trafficking of illegal Rohingya migrants from Myanmar.
Since May 1, dozens of bodies of deceased Rohingya migrants have been exhumed from graves found in Thai-Malaysian border areas, while more than 200 Rohingyas have reportedly been rescued.
Police and troops on Monday continued to scour suspected locations for detention camps of illegal migrants in the country's south.
A group of 26 Rohingyas, including nine children, were rescued while lost in the woods in Songkhla.
They had been reportedly destined for Malaysia but victimized by human traffickers who had extorted money from them, according to the police.
About half of the suspected sites have been searched so far, army chief Udomdej Sitabutr said. Endi