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Victims of trafficking recall their nightmare
PRATCH RUJIVANAROM
THE NATION
RANONG May 29, 2015
Victims of trafficking recall their nightmare - The Nation
Victims of trafficking recall their nightmare
THREE Bangladeshi victims of human trafficking have revealed the horror stories derived from being on a crowed boat on the Andaman Sea en route to a smuggler's camp in Songkhla.
The men have been held at Ranong Immigration Police's detention centre for 18 months awaiting deportation.
On Tuesday, The Nation was granted special permission to visit the detention centre and speak to them about transnational human trafficking.
Nur Alam, 19, said initially he and the two other men were not allowed to leave the facility to exercise and get some fresh air in its small courtyard and there was nothing to do.
"The living conditions have improved in the past few months as we are allowed to go out of the building and have some exercise," Alam said.
The three detainees seemed to be healthy and in a good state of mind.
Nur-e-Alam, 25, said he was offered "a vocation trip" to Malaysia by a trafficking broker at Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh but ended up on a smuggling boat heading to Thailand.
"First, I was taken to a small boat and then transferred to a bigger boat on the open sea," Nur-e-Alam said.
This is similar story to the one told by Alam, who was tricked into thinking he was going to Malaysia for a free tourism trip.
However, he also ended up on a crowed boat. The boat was at sea for nine days when it reached a mountainous shore, supposedly along the Andaman coast in Thailand.
The passengers were kept two nights on a nearby mountain before being transported by car to a camp near the Malaysian border, which housed around 80 people.
The other victim, Shaha Buddin, 23, who boarded the same boat as Nur Alam, described the conditions on the boat as very poor, as there were more than 400 people and the food supply was limited.
"They [the traffickers] only gave us two meals of plain rice and dried chilli [a day]. They also gave us only 20 millilitres of water three times per day. If anyone ask for more food or water, they were beaten up," Buddin said.
"On the later days of the journey on the sea, there was a food shortage and we only received one meal per day," he added.
He said that the traffickers threw sick people overboard and raped women repeatedly every night.
Unlike his companions, his intention was to find a better life in Malaysia. He said that he was promised job opportunities in Malaysia by his broker, who had offered a special discount for the sea journey.
After reaching the camp near the Malaysian border, all three men stated that they were forced to call back home to inform their families that they had to pay a BDT200,000 ransom (Bt87,000) or they would be killed.
Nur-e-Alam and Nur Alam's families paid the ransom in cash to the broker in Cox's Bazar and the money was transferred to a bank account in Thailand.
They were to be transported across the border into Malaysia along with the other people whose families paid the ransom but the camp was raised by Thai police before that happened.
Alam said that they were held in custody at Hat Yai for 21 days before being transferred to the detention centre in January 2014.
Alam and Buddin have been verified as Bangladeshi nationals by the Bangladeshi embassy in Bangkok but the verification process is ongoing for Nur-e-Alam.
Recently, more Bangladeshis have become victims of human trafficking, with 75 Bangladeshis arrested in Ranong between October 2014 and May. There are 134 Bangladeshis being detained in Immigration Police detention centres nationwide.
Ranong Immigration Police deputy commander Somchai Jitsangob Ranong said 10 Rohingya were also in the detention centre in the province.
PRATCH RUJIVANAROM
THE NATION
RANONG May 29, 2015
Victims of trafficking recall their nightmare - The Nation
Victims of trafficking recall their nightmare
THREE Bangladeshi victims of human trafficking have revealed the horror stories derived from being on a crowed boat on the Andaman Sea en route to a smuggler's camp in Songkhla.
The men have been held at Ranong Immigration Police's detention centre for 18 months awaiting deportation.
On Tuesday, The Nation was granted special permission to visit the detention centre and speak to them about transnational human trafficking.
Nur Alam, 19, said initially he and the two other men were not allowed to leave the facility to exercise and get some fresh air in its small courtyard and there was nothing to do.
"The living conditions have improved in the past few months as we are allowed to go out of the building and have some exercise," Alam said.
The three detainees seemed to be healthy and in a good state of mind.
Nur-e-Alam, 25, said he was offered "a vocation trip" to Malaysia by a trafficking broker at Cox's Bazar in Bangladesh but ended up on a smuggling boat heading to Thailand.
"First, I was taken to a small boat and then transferred to a bigger boat on the open sea," Nur-e-Alam said.
This is similar story to the one told by Alam, who was tricked into thinking he was going to Malaysia for a free tourism trip.
However, he also ended up on a crowed boat. The boat was at sea for nine days when it reached a mountainous shore, supposedly along the Andaman coast in Thailand.
The passengers were kept two nights on a nearby mountain before being transported by car to a camp near the Malaysian border, which housed around 80 people.
The other victim, Shaha Buddin, 23, who boarded the same boat as Nur Alam, described the conditions on the boat as very poor, as there were more than 400 people and the food supply was limited.
"They [the traffickers] only gave us two meals of plain rice and dried chilli [a day]. They also gave us only 20 millilitres of water three times per day. If anyone ask for more food or water, they were beaten up," Buddin said.
"On the later days of the journey on the sea, there was a food shortage and we only received one meal per day," he added.
He said that the traffickers threw sick people overboard and raped women repeatedly every night.
Unlike his companions, his intention was to find a better life in Malaysia. He said that he was promised job opportunities in Malaysia by his broker, who had offered a special discount for the sea journey.
After reaching the camp near the Malaysian border, all three men stated that they were forced to call back home to inform their families that they had to pay a BDT200,000 ransom (Bt87,000) or they would be killed.
Nur-e-Alam and Nur Alam's families paid the ransom in cash to the broker in Cox's Bazar and the money was transferred to a bank account in Thailand.
They were to be transported across the border into Malaysia along with the other people whose families paid the ransom but the camp was raised by Thai police before that happened.
Alam said that they were held in custody at Hat Yai for 21 days before being transferred to the detention centre in January 2014.
Alam and Buddin have been verified as Bangladeshi nationals by the Bangladeshi embassy in Bangkok but the verification process is ongoing for Nur-e-Alam.
Recently, more Bangladeshis have become victims of human trafficking, with 75 Bangladeshis arrested in Ranong between October 2014 and May. There are 134 Bangladeshis being detained in Immigration Police detention centres nationwide.
Ranong Immigration Police deputy commander Somchai Jitsangob Ranong said 10 Rohingya were also in the detention centre in the province.