
Khanai and Sew disembark
from the HTMS Prabparapak, tied up alongside the HTMS Su Pharin after
the latter pulled them from the sea.
Patcharapol Panrak
Two Burmese fishermen who claimed they were enslaved on Thai fishing
boats were pulled from Rayong Bay by navy rescuers after jumping
overboard to escape what they claimed was certain death.
Identified only as Khanai, 20, and Sew, 26, the Myanmar natives were
given food and water aboard the HTMS Su Pharin following their June 23
rescue. They were then treated at Queen Sirikit Naval Medical Center.
The navy said it found the sailors floating in a shipping lane off the
Maptaput Industrial Estate about two hours after the castaways were
reported.
The two men told navy officials they had jumped overboard the night
before carrying a bag of clothes and cash. They said they had been
worked like slaves on a Thai-owned fishing boat and felt they would have
either been killed or died working.
The rescue comes amid a United States decision to downgrade Thailand’s
standing on the State Department’s annual Trafficking in Persons Report.
The kingdom was listed on Tier II in the 2013, but was dropped to Tier
III last month.
Doing so triggered U.S. sanctions that include the withholding or
withdrawal of U.S. non-humanitarian and non-trade-related assistance. It
would also mean that Thailand faces U.S. opposition to assistance from
international financial institutions such as the International Monetary
Fund and World Bank.
Many Thai government and industry officials, however, claim there are no
trafficked foreigners in the fishing sector and that U.S. claims are
exaggerated.