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Raids, Arrests Leave Burmese Migrants on Edge in Thailand

(Chiang Rai Times)

CHIANG MAI – Burmese migrant workers in Thailand are living in fear, with some of their fellow laborers having been arrested in recent weeks and an unknown number of others returning to Burma as the Thai junta intensifies its crackdown on illegal foreign workers.

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Commemorating LGBT Pride Month Amid Thailand's Political Chaos

(Prachatai English)

By Takato Mitsunaga

Kristie A. Kenney, the United States Ambassador to Thailand, commemorated Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) Pride Month together with people in the LGBT community and those who support diversity in Thailand. The reception was held at the Ambassador’s Residence in Bangkok on Thursday evening. 

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Chiang Rai Monks Try To Thwart Earthquake By Mass Prayer

Kruba Boonchoom's note, instructing his followers to conduct a series of rituals to change the course of destiny and prevent the earthquake on 24 June.

CHIANG RAI — Over 500 people participated in a mass Buddhist prayer ceremony in Chiang Rai province to ward off widespread rumours that yet another earthquake will hit the northern region this week.

Several hundred people joined the mass chanting of Buddhist incantations, led by 199 monks in the province's ecclesiastic college yesterday. The academy's rector, Phra Rattanamunee, chaired ceremony.

Phra Rattanamunee said the two hour prayer session was held to prevent a repeat of the 6.0 magnitude earthquake that struck Chiang Rai on 5 May. 

"The prayers will cause blessing and peace, and prevent all kinds of calamity," said Phra Rattanamunee. 

Last month’s earthquake, which was the strongest quake in years, killed one person and damaged hundreds of homes, historic sites, temples, schools, and hospitals. 

According to rumor, a hermit in the mountains of Chiang Mai has predicted that another earthquake which will strike the province on 24 June.

The hermit, who is known as Kruba Boonchoom, has instructed his followers through a handwritten note to conduct a series of rituals to prevent the earthquake on 24 June. 

According to Boonchoom's instruction, each home owner is required to plant a banana leaf in one corner of his or her residence, then pray to local spirits with 19 wild olive leaves, incense, 19 candles, and two boiled eggs.

Boonchoom’s instructions end with the well-known Thai saying, "If you don't believe this, don't disrespect it. There is no harm in trying this."

 

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Official Confident Post-Coup Economy Will Net 2.6% Growth

Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha, chairman of the junta's National Council for Peace and Order.

BANGKOK — A top government official has disputed the central bank of Thailand's estimation of the country's post-coup economic trajectory, arguing that the projection is too low.

"The Ministry of Finance expects 2-3% growth in GDP this year," said Somchai Satjapong, director of the Fiscal Policy Office (FPO). "Which is close to FPO's estimation of 2.6% growth."

The Bank of Thailand (BoT) previously announced that Thailand would only experience 1.5% increase in GDP, fueling fears that the military coup on 22 May may worsen the country's economy, which has already suffered from months of political turmoil.

Rung Mallikamas, a spokesperson of the BoT, said the Bank originally predicted a GDP growth of 2.7%  but later decided to revise it. 

Mr. Somchai insisted that the BoT got it wrong. "The estimation is too low … we believe that the economy will improve in the latter half of this year."

He explained that consumer confidence has been growing steadily while exports, consumption, and spending have seen a significant boost in recent weeks. According to Mr. Somchai, the economic "roadmap" announced by the junta's National Council for Peace and Order (NCPO) will also restore foreign investors' confidence in Thailand. 

"I can guarantee that we won't see a growth that is less than 2% this year," Mr. Somchai said. 

 

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Trafficker of Rose-Selling Children on Khaosan Road Arrested

Police press conference on 21 June, 2014 at Crime Suppression Division HQ in Bangkok. [Photo by Rachel Kessler].

BANGKOK — Thai police have arrested a man who admitted to trafficking young Burmese children to sell flowers to foreign tourists in one of Bangkok's most popular tourist locales.

The arrest followed Khaosod English's request to interview the Anti-Human Trafficking Division (AHTD) about children who peddle roses to tourists until 3am every night on Khaosan Road, a notorious watering-hole for backpackers and late-night revelers in downtown Bangkok.  

Khaosod English and independent filmmaker Rachel Kessler have been investigating the story of these children for several weeks. Interviews with NGOs, business owners on Khaosan Road, and many of the children have suggested that at least some of them are victims of human trafficking.

This morning, Khaosod English was informed that its inquiry on Wednesday prompted police to investigate the area last night and bring five rose-selling children back to the police headquarters. All five children, ranging from age five to fourteen, are Burmese.

One of the children, a seven-year-old boy, told police he was purchased from his family on the Thai-Burmese border and is living with a caretaker in Bangkok who he referred to as his “boss.”

"From what the child told us, there was a transaction between the parents and the dealer beforehand," said Pol.Col. Chitpop Tomuan, a superintendent of the AHTD.

This morning, police tracked down and arrested the "boss" at a residential building near Khaosan Road, where officers found two more children living in the home. The 22-year-old suspect, who is also Burmese, confessed that he paid the children’s parents 50,000 Burmese kyat ($51.14 USD) for each child, Pol.Col. Chitpop said.

According to Witanapat Rutanavaleepong, the head of the Mirror Foundations Stop Child Begging project, hundreds of Burmese children are trafficked from communities along the Thai-Burmese border to sell roses in Bangkok and other popular tourist locations in Thailand. The Mirror Foundation has helped return a number of these children back to their families.

Many Burmese families living illegally in western Thailand’s border towns sell their children out of financial desperation, Mr. Witanapat said. Most of them live in extreme poverty and some have been forced to flee Myanmar to avoid ethnic and religious persecution.

According to Mr. Witanapat, families are approached by middlemen who offer a lump sum to take one of their children to sell roses in Bangkok with promises to send back monthly payments of around 1,500 baht. However, the children on Khaosan Road typically ring in around 1,000 baht per night, selling roses at 20 baht a piece. It is suspected that most of the money goes to their caretakers and traffickers.

Mr. Witanapat cited several cases in which families stopped receiving payments after the first few months and eventually lost contact with their children.  

“Most of them start with an agreement of how much money they will they get monthly and when the kid will be back,” said Mr. Witanapat said. “But then it becomes human trafficking because the handlers stop paying the families and refuse to return the child.”

According to Mr. Witanapat, only 20% of children sold into the rose-selling business are ever returned home.

This afternoon, the three children who told police they were purchased from their families were moved to a state-owned children’s shelter while police work on locating their parents.

“In the past several hours they have shown great improvement in their mental condition,” Pol.Col. Chitpop said. "They were frightened at first, but they are improving."

The children, who Khaosod English has spoken to on previous occasions and visited at the police headquarters this morning, appeared cheerful and relaxed.

Police are still questioning the four other children in their custody who claim to be selling roses voluntarily. Pol. Col. Chitpot said he suspects they have been trained to lie about their circumstances.

“They may have been threatened not to share any information,” he said.

Pol. Col. Chitpot said police are trying to contact their families to establish whether or not the children are victims of trafficking, but noted that their parents may be unwilling to step forward if they are living in Thailand illegally.  

There are at least eight more Burmese children, who Khaosod English has spoken to, that regularly sell roses on Khaosan Road and are not yet in police custody.

Today’s arrest came as Thailand’s military government scrambles to make up for a year of bad press surrounding the country’s dismal record of combatting human trafficking.  Tens of thousands of migrants from neighboring countries are trafficked across Thailand’s borders every year and many of them are forced into slavery or exploited in the sex industry. Recent reports by Reuters and The Guardian have thrust a global spotlight on the tragic fate of many trafficking victims, as well as the complicity of some Thai officials.

On Friday, the US State Department downgraded Thailand to the lowest rank in its annual Trafficking in Persons Report (TIP) for not complying with the minimum standards for eliminating human trafficking.  Thailand is now a member of the “Tier 3” category alongside countries like Iran, Syria, and North Korea.

According to the report, in 2014 Thailand’s “overall anti-trafficking law enforcement efforts remained insufficient compared with the size of the problem in Thailand, and corruption at all levels hampered the success of these efforts.”

Police are expected to hold a press conference about today’s arrest of the trafficking supsect at 10 a.m. tomorrow at the headquarters of the Crime Suppression Division. 

“It just feels good to know that these kids are going to go to bed at a normal hour tonight,” said Rachel Kessler, who is filming a documentary about the children who are trafficked to sell roses on Khaosan Road. Ms. Kessler has been researching the story of these children since last October. Her documentary, titled20 ฿AHT, is scheduled to release in 2015. 

(Reporting by Sally Mairs)
 
 

For comments, or corrections to this article please contact: [email protected]

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Trafficker of Rose-Selling Children on Khaosan Road Arrested

Police press conference on 21 June, 2014 at Crime Suppression Division HQ in Bangkok. [Photo by Rachel Kessler].

BANGKOK — Thai police have arrested a man who admitted to trafficking young Burmese children to sell flowers to foreign tourists in one of Bangkok's most popular tourist locales.

The arrest followed Khaosod English's request to interview the Anti-Human Trafficking Division (AHTD) about children who peddle roses to tourists until 3am every night on Khaosan Road, a notorious watering-hole for backpackers and late-night revelers in downtown Bangkok.  

Khaosod English and independent filmmaker Rachel Kessler have been investigating the story of these children for several weeks. Interviews with NGOs, business owners on Khaosan Road, and many of the children have suggested that at least some of them are victims of human trafficking.

This morning, Khaosod English was informed that its inquiry on Wednesday prompted police to investigate the area last night and bring five rose-selling children back to the police headquarters. All five children, ranging from age five to fourteen, are Burmese.

One of the children, a seven-year-old boy, told police he was purchased from his family on the Thai-Burmese border and is living with a caretaker in Bangkok who he referred to as his “boss.”

"From what the child told us, there was a transaction between the parents and the dealer beforehand," said Pol.Col. Chitpop Tomuan, a superintendent of the AHTD.

This morning, police tracked down and arrested the "boss" at a residential building near Khaosan Road, where officers found two more children living in the home. The 22-year-old suspect, who is also Burmese, confessed that he paid the children’s parents 50,000 Burmese kyat ($51.14 USD) for each child, Pol.Col. Chitpop said.

According to Witanapat Rutanavaleepong, the head of the Mirror Foundations Stop Child Begging project, hundreds of Burmese children are trafficked from communities along the Thai-Burmese border to sell roses in Bangkok and other popular tourist locations in Thailand. The Mirror Foundation has helped return a number of these children back to their families.

Many Burmese families living illegally in western Thailand’s border towns sell their children out of financial desperation, Mr. Witanapat said. Most of them live in extreme poverty and some have been forced to flee Myanmar to avoid ethnic and religious persecution.

According to Mr. Witanapat, families are approached by middlemen who offer a lump sum to take one of their children to sell roses in Bangkok with promises to send back monthly payments of around 1,500 baht. However, the children on Khaosan Road typically ring in around 1,000 baht per night, selling roses at 20 baht a piece. It is suspected that most of the money goes to their caretakers and traffickers.

Mr. Witanapat cited several cases in which families stopped receiving payments after the first few months and eventually lost contact with their children.  

“Most of them start with an agreement of how much money they will they get monthly and when the kid will be back,” said Mr. Witanapat said. “But then it becomes human trafficking because the handlers stop paying the families and refuse to return the child.”

According to Mr. Witanapat, only 20% of children sold into the rose-selling business are ever returned home.

This afternoon, the three children who told police they were purchased from their families were moved to a state-owned children’s shelter while police work on locating their parents.

“In the past several hours they have shown great improvement in their mental condition,” Pol.Col. Chitpop said. "They were frightened at first, but they are improving."

The children, who Khaosod English has spoken to on previous occasions and visited at the police headquarters this morning, appeared cheerful and relaxed.

Police are still questioning the four other children in their custody who claim to be selling roses voluntarily. Pol. Col. Chitpot said he suspects they have been trained to lie about their circumstances.

“They may have been threatened not to share any information,” he said.

Pol. Col. Chitpot said police are trying to contact their families to establish whether or not the children are victims of trafficking, but noted that their parents may be unwilling to step forward if they are living in Thailand illegally.  

There are at least eight more Burmese children, who Khaosod English has spoken to, that regularly sell roses on Khaosan Road and are not yet in police custody.

Today’s arrest came as Thailand’s military government scrambles to make up for a year of bad press surrounding the country’s dismal record of combatting human trafficking.  Tens of thousands of migrants from neighboring countries are trafficked across Thailand’s borders every year and many of them are forced into slavery or exploited in the sex industry. Recent reports by Reuters and The Guardian have thrust a global spotlight on the tragic fate of many trafficking victims, as well as the complicity of some Thai officials.

On Friday, the US State Department downgraded Thailand to the lowest rank in its annual Trafficking in Persons Report (TIP) for not complying with the minimum standards for eliminating human trafficking.  Thailand is now a member of the “Tier 3” category, alongside countries like Iran, Syria, and North Korea.

According to the report, in 2014 Thailand’s “overall anti-trafficking law enforcement efforts remained insufficient compared with the size of the problem in Thailand, and corruption at all levels hampered the success of these efforts.”

Police are expected to hold a press conference about today’s arrest of the trafficking supsect at 10 a.m. tomorrow at the headquarters of the Crime Suppression Division. 

“It just feels good to know that these kids are going to go to bed at a normal hour tonight,” said Rachel Kessler, who is filming a documentary about the children who are trafficked to sell roses on Khaosan Road. Ms. Kessler has been researching the story of these children since last October. Her documentary, titled 20 ฿AHT, is scheduled to release in 2015. 

 

For comments, or corrections to this article please contact: [email protected]

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US Downgrades Thailand After Human Trafficking, Slavery Revelations

statement on U.S. Embassy Bangkok facebook

By Cod Satrusayang (DPA)

BANGKOK (DPA) – The United States has downgraded Thailand in its annual human trafficking report after revelations of slavery in the country's shrimp industry.

Thailand was downgraded to the lowest rank in the State Department's Trafficking in Persons report (TIP), putting it on the same level as Iran, Cuba, Zimbabwe and North Korea.

The report cites the recruitment of young women into the sex trade, slavery within the seafood industry, as well as the trafficking of Rohingya refugees from Myanmar.

The report points to corruption as a major barrier to fighting such abuses, adding that officials and police were in many cases complicit in forced labour and sex slavery.

The military junta which governs Thailand has acknowledged that trafficking is a real problem. In his weekly address to the nation on Friday, junta leader Prayuth Chan-Ocha stated that the government was working to "address the issue."

In a meeting with the US ambassador, Thailand's acting foreign minister stressed that the country places "great importance on combatting and eradicating human trafficking."

An expose in Britain's Guardian newspaper last week revealed that Thailand's shrimp farmers were buying feed made from fish caught using forced labour.

"Large numbers of men [are] bought and sold like animals and held against their will on fishing boats off Thailand," the report stated.

Last week Thailand was the only country to vote against a motion that would enforce the International Labour Organization's convention against slave labour, citing that local conditions may not be ready to implement such a measure.

The reaction from NGOs and rights groups was harsh, with the executive director of the Environmental Justice Foundation calling the decision an "absolute disgrace and one that brings further shame on to an already embattled government."

Thailand subsequently rescinded its abstention and voted in favour of the protocol.

Thailand's downgrade to the lowest tier of the TIP report means that it may face economic sanctions and the withdrawal of aid.

Multinational companies will now be encouraged to stop trading in industries where forced labour may play a role.

 

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Thai Women Scammed For 3 Million Baht By German 'Lover'

A German man has swindled over 3 million baht from Thai women who he fooled into marrying him and ordering non-existent iPhones from Germany, police say.

BANGKOK — A German man has swindled over 3 million baht from Thai women who he fooled into marrying him and ordering non-existent iPhones from Germany, police say.

Bogdan Rejic was arrested earlier this week by Bangkok Metropolitan Police and charged with various counts of fraud.

Pol.Maj.Gen. Nopparat Sinma said yesterday that many Thai women complained to the police that Mr. Bogdaan flirted with them on a dating mobile phone app and claimed to be a German expat working for the state-owned petroleum company PTT. 

The women began dating Mr. Rejik and some of them even married him, Pol.Maj.Gen. Nopparat said. According to Pol.Maj.Gen. Nopparat, Mr. Rejik later convinced them they could order shipments of iPhones at a low price from Germany to be sold for a profit in Thailand.

"Many people fell for it and transferred money to a bank account provided by Mr. Bogdaan, which is registered under the name of someone called Gez," Pol.Maj.Gen. Nopparat said. "But when it was time for the phone delivery, he would avoid [the women]. So the victims decided to file complaints."

Pol.Maj.Gen. Nopparat estimated that Mr. Rejik has collected over 3 million baht through this scheme. He did not say how many women filed complaints.

The police investigation revealed that Mr. Rejik arrived in Thailand in 2000 and has overstayed his visa ever since. Pol.Maj.Gen. Nopparat said the court issued an arrest warrant on the suspect in March and eventually arrested him in Bangkok's Prawet district this week. 

Mr. Rejik has appeared in a number of movies as an extra actor, our correspondent said. His latest appearance was in the horror film "Hong Hoon" which premiered in cinema on 19 June. 

 

 

 

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Officials to Revise Textbooks, Increase Study Hours on Patriotism

(Prachatai English)

BANGKOK — Thailand's Basic Education Commission plans to increase study hours on Thainess and patriotism for primary and secondary school students for up to 40 hours per year. 

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Armed Navy personnel lead 200-strong Phuket land raid

(Phuket Gazette)

PHUKET: More than 200 officers under armed escort by Royal Thai Navy personnel arrested five suspects for violent intimidation of villagers in Phuket’s Soi Palai area early this morning.

Read more of the story here.

 

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