THE discovery of mass graves in Thai jungles of poor migrant workers
including large number of Bangladeshi nationals, has raised question on
how this sad, illegal human trafficking is taking place. We would like
to say, this degrading and shameful trade must come to an end and to
achieve this goal, joint initiatives must be at work by the governments
of Bangladesh, Myanmar, Thailand and Malaysia to root out organized
gangs running this trade. As we see, it has become a multi-billion
dollar trade thriving as a modern day slavery. Traffickers are luring
poor people on promise of good job in Malaysia and hold them hostage in
the midway demanding huge ransom. Their failure earned traffickers' ire
who then leave them in jungle camps to perish at the end. We know
traffickers are operating through the jungle corridor of Thailand and
the sea lane of the region and the trade flourished unabated until last
week when the jungle cruelties leaked out to international media to
force the Thai police to mount raids at some jungle camps to unearth the
gravesites and human bodies scattered around. The disclosure has not
only raised question how the Thai authorities were indifferent to the
jungle trade although some news had always leaked to the press. We also
wonder how the authorities in Bangladesh allowed it to continue
particularly from the coastline of Cox's Bazar and Teknaf regions. The
New Nation and many other national dailies reported on the illegal human
trafficking from Bangladesh coastline on many occasions but it did not
stop despite the presence of our coast guard in the sea. News report on
Sunday initially highlighted the discovery of 32 graves of victims in
the Thai jungles. Twenty-six bodies were found - badly decayed - from
shallow graves covered by bamboo and a few feet of dirt in them. Two
individuals were also rescued, one of them a Bangladeshi national from
the campsite. Then broke out the news of another gravesite where more
than 50 graves were detected with some other camps with smaller numbers
of buried bodies scattered near the Thai-Malaysia border. We fear there
may be many more. Thailand's police chief said the campsites were
"virtual prison camps" where migrants were held in makeshift bamboo
cages. According to the UN Refugee agency; over 87,000 people embarked
on voyages to Malaysia from Myanmar and Bangladesh since 2012. Poor
Bangladeshi nationals and Rohingya Muslims of Myanmar, who are the
world's most persecuted minority community, are the main victims whose
bodies are now exhumed from Thai jungles. As we see, the tragedy can be
only compared in the dawning of people in thousands in the Mediterranean
in their desperate attempt to escape from the war ravage in Middle East
and African countries. In both cases; people are dying to escape from
extreme poverty and none but the rich are destroying peace of the poor.
It is not enough to talk about exploitation by human traffickers. Every
government has a big responsibility to have jobs for its own people. The
jobless people within the country desperately look for opportunities
outside for their own survival. So blaming human traffickers only cannot
be the whole solution for the human crisis. Jobless people should be
seen as an international human problem and must be solved in cooperation
with other countries.