Thai Police: 54 Migrant Workers Suffocate
Workers From Myanmar Die In Back Of Truck While Being Smuggled
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Photo
Myanmar migrant workers pause to reflect on lost friends and family as they attend a dedication ceremony in this Dec. 26, 2006 file photo, of the Tsunami Cemetery in Bang Muang, Thailand. Fifty-four Myanmar migrant workers suffocated in the back of a seafood truck in southern Thailand while being smuggled to the popular resort of Phuket, police said Thursday, April 10, 2008. (AP Photo/David Longstreath)
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An additional 47 workers survived the incident late Wednesday in Ranong province and flagged down police for help, police Col. Kraithong Chanthongbai said. Twenty-one were hospitalized while the rest were detained for questioning, he said.
"When police got to the scene, they found that 54 of the workers were already dead in the packed container truck," Kraithong said.
Of the dead, 37 were women and 17 were men. Police did not immediately know what jobs they were heading for, but illegal Myanmar immigrants in that region generally work in the fishing and construction industries or as maids.
Police were searching for the truck's driver, who had fled the scene, and members of the smuggling gang they believed arranged the trip.
Kraithong blamed the driver for failing to turn on the air conditioning in the back of the truck, which normally was used to transport seafood.
The surviving workers told police they snuck into Ranong province from Myanmar's Victoria Point by fishing boat Wednesday night and were then packed into a small container truck for a trip to Phuket.
But after two hours, the workers told police that many of them began falling sick because of poor ventilation in the truck, Kraithong said.
The driver stopped the truck after being alerted to the problem but then fled the scene, Kraithong said.
The London-based human rights group Amnesty International found in a 2005 report that workers from Myanmar take jobs that Thais consider too dirty, dangerous or demeaning.
There are about a million Myanmar workers registered to work in Thailand, and an additional million estimated to be in the country illegally to work mostly as laborers, joining hundreds of thousands from Cambodia and Laos.
The illegal workers lack legal protections and are often ruthlessly exploited.
Some of the Myanmar migrants flee their country to escape armed conflicts between ethnic minority rebels and the Myanmar army, and others for lack of economic opportunity in their impoverished country, one of the poorest in Asia.
The London-based human rights group Amnesty International found in a 2005 report that workers from Myanmar take jobs that Thais consider too dirty, dangerous or demeaning, "are routinely paid well below the Thai minimum wage, work long hours in unhealthy conditions and are at risk of arbitrary arrest and deportation."
Many also face great risk in reaching Thailand. In December, authorities recovered the bodies of 22 Myanmar migrants found floating off the west coast of Thailand in the Andaman Sea. They were believed to be trying to enter Thailand illegally.
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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- Interesting to observe how Thailand deals with illegal immigrants. I''ll bet you there would be a lot less illegals coming over the border from Mexico if the US treated them the same way. Human rights exist, but if you are a criminal, you are treated like one. If you are illegal, you are sent back to your home country.
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- People do strange things when forced into difficult situations in life.Work to take care of your family is a big stressor.Many people around the world have paid the ultimate price for just loving their families,and trying to provide for them.They need to find the driver of that truck and put his can,in the can!They also need to lighten up on the border''s so these people don''t have to sneak to work.
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- Are you sure that they were not s.ex workers being "snuggled"?
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