Thai suspects arrested over Rohingya refugee deaths

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In this photo taken on September 12, 2024, Rohingya refugees gather to collect relief material at a camp in Ukhia. Around a million members of the stateless and persecuted Muslim minority live in a sprawling patchwork of Bangladeshi relief camps after fleeing violence in their homeland next door. Hasina was lauded by the international community in 2017 for opening the borders to around 750,000 Rohingya who fled a Myanmar military crackdown that is now the subject of a UN genocide investigation. (Photo by Munir UZ ZAMAN / AFP) / TO GO WITH: Bangladesh-Myanmar-conflict-refugee-Rohingya, FOCUS by Mohammad MAZED and Tanbirul Miraj RIPON

Hundreds of thousands of Rohingyas fled Myanmar for neighbouring Bangladesh in 2017 during a crackdown by the military.

PHOTO: AFP

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BANGKOK – Thai police have arrested three suspected people smugglers over the deaths of three Rohingya refugees who suffocated in the back of trucks in Thailand, officers said on Nov 2.

Three Rohingya refugees died and six others were injured after traffickers allegedly packed 26 people who had made their way across the Thai-Myanmar border into two vehicles.

The mainly Muslim Rohingyas are heavily persecuted in war-torn western Myanmar, and thousands risk their lives each year to try to reach Malaysia or Indonesia through Thailand.

A representative of Thailand’s Central Investigation Bureau told AFP on Nov 2 that police arrested a main suspect – Somkiat, or “Bang Golf”, 30 – in south-eastern Chanthaburi province on Oct 30.

Two suspected accomplices, Nattawut, 20, and Pongpitsanu, 20, were arrested in Bangkok on the same day.

They are all being held on the grounds of “smuggling illegal immigrants into the kingdom”, police said in a statement.

Police added that Somkiat was working with other trafficking networks in the country and had been offered around 3,000 baht (S$117) per refugee successfully smuggled.

Hundreds of thousands of Rohingyas

fled Myanmar for neighbouring Bangladesh

in 2017 during a crackdown by the military that is now the subject of a United Nations genocide court case.

Myanmar’s

military seized power in a 2021 coup

and three years of war since then have displaced millions of people in the country. AFP

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