11 young Thais rescued before being smuggled to call centre gang in Cambodia
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The authorities said one of the boys who was rescued had been promised an online job with a monthly salary of at least 20,000 baht (S$795) and full welfare benefits.
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BANGKOK – Thai troops rescued 11 young people from a house near the border in Sa Kaeo province on the evening of Oct 13 before they could be smuggled to Cambodia to work for a call centre gang.
The rescue operation, led by the Aranyaprathet Taskforce, was carried out at around 6.30pm local time after the eastern branch of the Immanuel Foundation Thailand alerted the unit that several parents had filed complaints, reporting that their teenage sons had been deceived and detained by a gang.
Colonel Chainarong Kasi, commander of the taskforce, said the foundation had informed him that one teenager had contacted his parents to say he was being held at a house in Moo 3 village, Tambon Fak Huay, Aranyaprathet district, since the morning of Oct 13.
Col Chainarong said the boy had been promised an online job that paid at least 20,000 baht (S$795) a month, and full welfare benefits. Ten other victims were reportedly lured with similar promises.
They were told to travel to Sa Kaeo, where they were given temporary accommodation near the Aranyaprathet bus terminal before being taken to a house near the border, where they were held in detention.
The teenage boy managed to call his family, informing them that 10 other Thais were also being held at the same location.
After learning the precise location, Col Chainarong dispatched his team to investigate and found 11 Thai young people, including the boy whose family had raised the alarm. The taskforce then alerted Aranyaprathet police and the district chief to inspect the scene.
The 11 rescued young people were taken to Aranyaprathet Police Station for questioning.
On Oct 14, commander of Aranyaprathet Police Station Chuchart Kongmuang transferred the group to the foundation’s Centre for Aiding Thai Expats for temporary care pending further interrogation.
They were later brought back to the police station at 9am local time for additional questioning. The police determined that all of them were under 20 years old and came from several provinces: two each from Chiang Rai and Chiang Mai, and one each from Ratchaburi, Surin, Saraburi, Ayutthaya, Nakhon Pathom, Nakhon Ratchasima and Nakhon Phanom. THE NATION/ASIA NEWS NETWORK

