Thailand's most senior human trafficking investigator to seek political asylum in Australia
NB: This report shows yet again that criminality on a collossal scale emanates from the very top of the social-political pyramid-DS
Thailand’s most senior police investigator into human trafficking is seeking political asylum in Australia, saying he fears for his life because influential figures in the Thai government, military and police are implicated in trafficking and want him killed. Major General Paween Pongsirin arrived in Melbourne a few days ago on a tourist visa and has now told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s 7.30 program and Guardian Australia he plans to seek asylum.
Thailand’s most senior police investigator into human trafficking is seeking political asylum in Australia, saying he fears for his life because influential figures in the Thai government, military and police are implicated in trafficking and want him killed. Major General Paween Pongsirin arrived in Melbourne a few days ago on a tourist visa and has now told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s 7.30 program and Guardian Australia he plans to seek asylum.
For a respected and high-profile police investigator to flee
the country and make such serious allegations will be highly embarrassing for
the Thai government. Human rights groups have consistently said that the
south-east Asian nation has turned a blind eye to the abuse of trafficked
people and that many officials are implicated in the trade. Thailand’s military
junta denies the claims.
Paween said he hoped Australia would grant him asylum. “I worked in the trafficking area to help human beings who
were in trouble,” he said. “I wasn’t thinking of a personal benefit but now it
is me who is in trouble. I believe there should be some safe place for me,
somewhere on this earth to help me.”
In May, Thai police discovered
more than 30 graves in an abandoned jungle camp near the Malaysian
border. Many of the exhumed bodies were believed to beRohingya Muslims, a
long-persecuted minority who have been fleeing
Myanmar on rickety boats, arriving in Thailand on their way
to the relative safety of Malaysia. Others were asylum seekers and migrants
from Bangladesh.
Traffickers have imprisoned these
and other asylum seekers in make-shift camps on the Thai-Malaysian border, demanding
their relatives pay ransoms for their release. Survivors say that many
were raped, beaten and murdered if ransoms were not paid. Major General Paween was appointed to lead the investigation
into the grim discovery, which at the time was interpreted as Thailand treating the
issue more seriously. His team uncovered a major human trafficking syndicate
but he says that “from the beginning” he was under pressure not to pursue the
perpetrators too enthusiastically.
Paween, 57, says he “followed the evidence”. So far, there
have been 153 arrest warrants related to trafficking. Last month, 88 people appeared
in court for a procedural hearing,
including
a senior military general alleged to be a kingpin, other military
officers, local politicians and business figures. “All 88 defendants together let victims starve, denied
health treatments for sick victims and hid bodies on the mountain (camps) where
they died,” a judge reportedly said at the hearing.
But Paween, a career police officer, resigned from the force
last month after he was transferred against his will to an insurgency-plagued
region in the deep south of Thailand. He said traffickers he was pursuing were
influential in this region and “senior police” in the area were involved with
the trade. He told his superiors that he feared for his life if he were sent
there, but says his protests were ignored.
As well, the investigation he led was disbanded after just
five months, despite Paween insisting it was far from finished. Asked who stopped the investigation, Paween said through an
interpreter: “Influential people involved in human trafficking. There are some
bad police and bad military who do these kind of things. Unfortunately, those
bad police and bad military are the ones that have power.” Paween did not name the senior officials he alleges are
complicit in the human trafficking trade in Thailand, but says the jungle camps
would have needed influential oversight to stay open.
“A person who can detain hundreds of people without being
arrested for so many years cannot be an ordinary citizen.” There were many more government officials that should be
prosecuted, including those at senior levels. “Human trafficking is a big network that involves lots of
the military, politicians and police. While I was supervising the cases I was
warned all along.” He also blames “influential people” for his transfer. “By
re-posting me to the deep south of Thailand it means they want to kill me.”
Paween fears that the upcoming trials will be compromised
and that many of those charged will not be convicted. He was due to be a key
witness at the trials and knows that many witnesses will feel intimidated from
giving evidence. “I feel so sad and it’s so unfair that these people will not
be punished.” Paween’s asylum claim is likely to have international
implications. Thailand has previously been annoyed that Washington downgraded
it to the lowest category in a report that assesses countries’ willingness to
fight human trafficking.
Phil Robertson, deputy director of the Asia division of
Human Rights Watch, told Guardian Australia that Paween was an “honest, no
nonsense and experienced investigator”. “Evidently this time his investigation got too close to some
powerful people. It is no exaggeration to say that this is a fundamental test
case of the commitments that Thailand’s leaders have made to eradicate human
trafficking.”
Sitting on the banks of the Yarra River in Melbourne, Paween
says he has no idea how the Thai government will react to his asylum claim. He
speaks quietly and with little emotion, but says he is “deeply saddened” by
being forced to leave his home and being unable to continue his work.
He understands the irony, too, of someone trying to help
refugees ending up an asylum seeker himself. It was difficult pursuing those
involved, he said, but he “had to do his duty”. “I didn’t think about those things then. Now I realise it
was dangerous.”