Malaysia finds 139 graves near border

Photo made available on May 25, 2015 by the Royal Malaysian Police shows an abandoned migrant detention camp used by people-smugglers in a jungle near the Malaysia-Thailand border in Genting Perah. PHOTO | ROYAL MALAYSIAN POLICE |

What you need to know:

  • Unclear how many bodies were buried.
  • Thai police say they have found a half-dozen camps and more than 30 bodies so far on their side.

WANG KELIAN, Malaysia

Malaysian police said on Monday they had found 139 grave sites and 28 abandoned detention camps used by people-smugglers and capable of housing hundreds, on border with Thailand laying bare the grim extent of the region’s migrant crisis.

Thailand, meanwhile, deployed a helicopter carrier to serve as a temporary medical and processing centre as the United States offered to launch flights to locate vessels carrying migrants but abandoned by smugglers, with rights groups warning thousands of boat people may still be at sea.

Malaysia’s national police chief Khalid Abu Bakar announced the discovery of the grave sites and camps, but said it remained unclear how many bodies were buried in the inaccessible area of mountainous jungle along the Thai border.

The findings appeared to indicate a system of camps and graves larger than those discovered by Thai police in early May, a finding which ignited regional concern about human smuggling and trafficking.

The Malaysian discovery follows earlier denials by the government — long accused by rights groups of not doing enough to stop the illicit trade — that such grisly sites existed in the country.

“It’s a very sad scene… to us even one is serious and we have found 139,” Khalid told reporters in the border town of Wang Kelian, vowing to find the culprits.

He said authorities had found 139 suspected graves and 28 detention camps, but noted that it was not known how many bodies were in each grave.

Police have released no information yet on causes of death.

MAJOR ROUTE

Khalid said the largest of the 28 camps could hold up to 300 people, another had a capacity of 100, and the rest about 20 each.

By comparison, Thai police have said they found a half-dozen jungle camps and more than 30 bodies so far on their side.

Thailand was previously a major people-smuggling route to Malaysia, which is the preferred destination of migrants from Bangladesh and from Myanmar’s oppressed Rohingya minority.

But a Thai crackdown launched after graves were found there triggered a regional crisis as nervous traffickers abandoned overloaded vessels carrying starving migrants.

After initially turning boatloads away, Malaysia and Indonesia last week bowed to international pressure to accept the boat people temporarily.

Thailand, which is hosting a May 29 regional meeting on the crisis, said today it had deployed a carrier to act as a “floating base with medics and police” on board.