Tag Archive for 'Sudarat-Sereewat'

British pensioner, 78, sentenced to 14 years for abusing children

“I will die in Thai jail” says man known to children as ‘The Ghost’

 

Other versions of this story by the same author

Link to Daily Mail ‘Former Catholic lay preacher, 78, jailed in Thailand for raping under-aged girls

The SUN - Sick Brit jailed for child rape

From Andrew Drummond, Bangkok 

A British pensioner known to street children as ‘The Ghost’  was today jailed for 14 years on two cases of child rape, after a history of child abuse complaints dating back 18 years
Maurice Praill, 78, a former Catholic lay preacher and video shop owner, was jailed for the rape of two under-aged girls,  by the Thai Supreme Court. 
Judge Charoenchai Assawapirya-a-nan confirmed a sentence imposed more than eight years ago. 
He said there was no way the child victims could have lied because they gave so much detailed evidence including how Praill cut up his Viagra tablets and his use of KY jelly.
Praill, from Harold Hill, Essex, was led off to prison in the Thai provincial capital of Chonburi. “Paedophile I don’t use that word,” he said. “I pay to feel”
The girls were paid, he insisted.
He said he was stunned at the verdict and insisted that the elder of the two victims, aged 14, wanted to marry him afterwards.
 “I expect I will die in prison if I do not get a pardon.”
Praill had been repeatedly arrested in Thailand for child sex offences, and released on bail, by the police and courts, since he sold his business  in England and retired in the resort of Pattaya, 100 miles east of Bangkok in 1990.
He insisted before being led away in a blue prison bus: “I just like helping young people, sex or not, never mind, it was not the main thing’.
For the first few arrests in the 90s, local newspapers reported, he just ‘paid fines ‘at the local police station, another way of saying he paid off the police and victims.
But then Praill, the stepfather of former Irish International and Crystal Palace footballer Jon Goodman, was  sentenced to 14 years in December 2001 on the rape charges of two girls aged 13 and 14.
 He had been able to stay free by getting bail while petitioning the Appeal Court, which confirmed his sentence, then he went the country’s Supreme Court, a total eight year process.
Meanwhile Praill was arrested again in 2007 for the rape of two girls aged 11 and 9 and again given bail. That case has not gone to trial.
Then in March last year he was arrested in Pattaya for abusing an eight-year-old boy, and bailed again for the equivalent of £6000. That case too awaits trial.
Praill, who ran a video hire business in Chingford, Essex , called Phoenix Entertainment, was nickname  Phi  or ‘The Ghost’ because of  his frightening appearance, said Sudarat Sereewat, Director of the FACE (Fight Against Child Exploitation)  Foundation, and a member of Thailand’s National Child Protection Committee.
But local expatriates called him ‘Davros’ a fictitious villain, and creator of the Daleks,  in the BBC TV children’s sci-fi  series ‘Dr.Who’.
When he first arrived in Thailand Praill kept a diary, now with the FACE Foundation, which detailed his attempts to buy up schoolchildren as his ‘wives’. 
But far for being their benevolent benefactor he wrote how he paid sums of just £2 and £3 for what he referred to as ‘my conjugal rights’ and baulked when they asked for more.
He also complained in his diary how British government were taxing his pension.
In February 1992 he was trying to lure a girl 12-yr-old called ‘Ann’ to his rented house but she left demanding money for her school.  ‘She does not want to provide me with even minimal conjugal rites,” he wrote bitterly.
He fortified himself with the sex drug Viagra and Vitamin C capsules and trawled three locations in Pattaya, the Royal Garden Centre  the Siren Bar and the ‘Made in Thailand’ market where he knew young girls hung out and found another 12-yr-old called Lek .
He wrote how he provided ‘lacquer’ for Lek and her friends , who sniffed glue in his front room, and of his desire to conquer her.   But each time  he tried she complained ‘I don’t want to’ or ‘It hurts’.
“She makes me horny.  How long can I take this?” he asked his diary.
Then on Wednesday May 6th 1992 he announced in triumph that his grooming had been successful: “About 10 p.m. I have the best session ever. She seems to enjoy it.”
Praill went on to marry the girl in a Buddhist ceremony after she became 15 and he had paid the parents a dowry of £1000.  Monks blessed and Praill later boasted: “A policeman played the organ at the wedding party.”
He had employed the girl’s parents as his household staff.  But there may have been another motive for the marriage.  In his diary he wrote how Lek knew a ‘virgin’ working in a local tropical garden and elephant t show tourist attraction, whom she could bring to the house.
His marriage lasted only three months before his young bride walked out to be with friends her own age.
FACE Director Sudarat Sereewat said: “The Supreme Court decision is good news for children in Thailand and for those fighting to suppress child abuse. 
“Maurice Praill, I feel, should never have been given bail to continue with his abuses and interfere with witnesses and had already complained to the Regional Police.  It was a difficult case because Praill would pay the families.  Children are now safe from him.”
Abusers in Thailand have easily been able to play the system in the past. Police often negotiate compensation payments for the victims and for their own time.  Parents do not want their children to go to court and would much prefer monetary compensation.

 

 

Gary Glitter - where they went wrong

(originally published September 2008)

When the disgraced former glam-rock star was released from jail in Vietnam, Bangkok based journalists Andrew Drummond and Andrew Chant made sure the convicted paedophile went back to the U.K., despite a Hong Kong diversion which was billed in the UK as Glitter’s Asian Tour 2008.

It was fitting as both Drummond and Chant were the journalists who had originally tracked him down to Vietnam and exposed his activities in Vung Tau after first finding his home in Cambodia.

But as Andrew Drummond reports he could easily have slipped away.   He also illustrates the role journalists are playing in this controversial issue of child sex abusers and the problems they encounter and the criticisms, some justified, they face.

 

“Look here. This is their card. On it, it says ‘Protecting Children Everywhere’  - but they are clearly not.  Had we left it up to Scotland Yard’s CEOP (Scotland Yard’s Exploitation and Online Protection unit) Gary Glitter would now be roaming free in Thailand.

“Once in Bangkok he could have got a false passport, changed his appearance, and quite literally disappeared.”

I’m talking to Sudarat Sereewat, a member of Thailand’s National Committee on Child Protection, and as Secretary General of FACE  (Fight Against Child Exploitation) the foreign paedophile’s worst enemy in Thailand.

Gary Glitter, real name Paul Francis Gadd, had finally been put on Flight TG901 to London after 48 hours of screaming, feigning illness, and balling out British Embassy officials and police.

But, as Sudarat intimated, he was within a hair’s breadth of freedom in Thailand. He just needed to escape a posse of reporters.

She adds: “It appears Scotland Yard was busily telling the world they were waiting to meet this man in London but they failed to tell Thailand’s Immigration department he was coming here.

In the ‘No Man’s land’ of Suvarnabhumi airport earlier this year I watched  as Scotland Yard’s  CEOP tried to get their man.

Because indirectly I, who was the person, who told Thai police what they were about to face, and initiated his Asian tour.

There has been considerable debate about the ‘Glitter’ story.  On the one hand its quite clear that there something quite appalling in the massive coverage Glitter’s latest tour and his subsequent hounding merely because Glitter is a ‘celebrity paedophile’.

The News of the World and SUN were leading the ‘Hang em high’ brigade, but there was, nevertheless, a pretty clear consensus that having served 2 years nine months in a Vietnamese jail for offences against Vietnamese children – his lawyers paid compensation to two families to avoid rape charges – he should be returned to regulators in Britain in all possible haste.

That’s what the British Government had planned,  but on August 19th at Tan Son Nhat international airport in Ho Chi Minh City as I waited to join Glitter, on his 8.50 p.m. flight,  there were already signs that something would go wrong with this particular deportation.

In London, Scotland Yard had leaked information to journalists that the convicted paedophile would be met by police on his arrival in Britain, specifically at Gatwick airport. He could not travel anywhere.

Scotland Yard even leaked to favoured and trusted journalists that he was flying to London via Doha by Qatar Airways. One TV crew actually went leaving my colleague Andy Chant holding the ITN card, myself running for Sky TV, and Jonathan Head and Andrew Harding alternating for the BBC.

Meanwhile Britain’s Home Secretary Jacqui Smith selected August 19th as the day she would announce new legislation which would stop convicted paedophiles  - ‘people like Gary Glitter’ - from travelling abroad.  This would be announced shortly before Glitter was led ignominiously off from Heathrow airport.

In Ho Chi Minh City Glitter’s lawyer , Le Kinh Tanh was also publicly saying his client was being deported to London, which was odd, as he had told my colleague Andrew Chant the week before; that Glitter was free a free man as soon as he left Vietnam.

I already had the print-out for Glitter’s reservation in ‘tourist class’ in seat 63K on the Thai Airways flight to Bangkok so I booked the seat beside him.

The Vietnamese authorities had announced that Glitter would have to travel tourist class.

So when a local Vietnamese took the seat next to me and Glitter took his seat in Business Class I knew that a local Asian deal had been done and pretty sure Le Than Kinh had done his client a last favour.

I immediately called Sudarat Sereewat in Bangkok.  We had discussed Glitter previously. We both knew that,  as he had no convictions in Thailand, no alert would go up if he tried to go through immigration unless someone took action.  She assumed the British Government had everything under control.  Scotland Yard had paid enough visits to Vietnam.

She quickly established however that Thai Immigration had no inkling of his arrival or for that matter who on earth he was, and had less than two hours to go to work on the case.

A fax was immediately sent to Police General  Chatchawal  Suksomjit,  Head of Thailand’s Immigration Police together with a copy of  Glitter’s full indictment in Vietnam,  which I had passed on earlier.  In it also were the details I had sent including Glitter’s passport number, and date of birth.

Sudarat made it to Bangkok’s just ten minutes before the plane arrived on the night of Tuesday the 19th.  Police there, led by Colonel ‘Pop’ Putiporn,  had been ordered to work closely with her.

 Thai Immigration Police were waiting at the aircraft door together with hospitality staff of Thai Airways. Glitter had told the cabin crew he was a star who wished to avoid the press.  

For the next 24 hours there ensued what Fleet Street concluded was an ‘oriental farce’ which began almost immediately as Glitter, first feigning illness, locked himself in a room airside at Louis Tavern, as a CEOP officer Martin Joss tried to coax him to go home. 

Flight TG901 was getting close to boarding.  Joss was failing, what’s more the Scotland Yard officer was in an unenviable position as he was there ‘unofficially’ and not accompanied, as is normal, by a Thai Police officer. 

Nor at first did he get a warm welcome from Sudarat.  His boss, Jim Warnock, Director of Operations at CEOP, had been particularly difficult, she felt, in helping secure the arrest of another British paedophile in Bangkok earlier in the year.

But if Martin Joss could quickly persuade Glitter that Britain was his only option then perhaps the problem would go away.

There was little Thai authorities could do, as the Vietnamese police had not given Thai Airways any documentation that Glitter was being deported.

But when Joss was asked whether he had any paper work showing Glitter’s convictions in the U.K.,” he said: “No,”  adding, a little timidly, that as this was not his jurisdiction he wished to keep a low profile.

He was however given time with Glitter, with Thai Police and Sudarat witnessing the interview.

Glitter remained rigid: “I am a British citizen. I am entitled to full rights. I have served my time and now I am a first class passenger.”

He now wanted to see a British Embassy official.

 Stephen Buckley, an Attaché representing Britain’s Department of Trade & Industry, whose duty that night was to answer calls from Brits in life or death situations,  arrived at 12.40 – just a few minutes before Glitter’s onward flight was due for boarding.

Glitter again demanded his rights.

“I’ll need to speak to the Ambassador,” said Buckley, diplomatically.

But flight TG901 pulled out before Ambassador Quinton Quayle could be contacted, or at least before he could give a reply.

The next morning Glitter spent some frustrating hours waiting for a ‘promised ticket to Singapore’ to arrive from Thai Airlines and the CEOP officer snuck up to Glitter’s room for some last minute persuasion.

 Perhaps as Jacqui Smith had already made her ‘Glitter is going nowhere’ proclamation broadcast , which could be picked up in Thailand this was again fruitless. He left telling Glitter ‘I am not missing tonights flight to London. If you are not on it I cannot help you anymore.”

And Thai Police were still in a pickle.  Although they now had a fax from Jim Warnock CEOP’s Head of Operations, saying that Glitter should sent back to London, there were still no details of his British conviction.

All they could do however, was, having warned Glitter not to attempt to go through Immigration, arrest him for being in breach of a police order if he did, and throw him into Bangkok’s Immigration Jail.  When that happened, they felt, it would not be long before he demanded deportation.

Not surprisingly, as he had a police escort, he did not attempt to get through immigration.

They chose the much simpler course.  They allowed him to fly on to Hong Kong, while telling the Hong Kong authorities to expect him and send him back with deportation papers.

I joined him on the flight in the seat behind. We spoke briefly.

He simply replied that he was going to Hong Kong from medical treatment. He was either feigning or had a lot of trouble hearing my questions.  Lots of shrugging and pointing to his ears. Then he spent time on his phone calling his lawyers in London and trying to fix his Hong Kong accommodation whom he seemed to hear perfectly.

Glitter was of course detained by the authorities in Hong Kong then sent back to Bangkok.  Glitter would now be on Thursday’s TG109 by hook or by crook. By now he was too tired to fight.

By the time he got to London however the British Government, and CEOP, and The Home Office had received a minor roasting by the press and by the public on internet forums.

The exception may have been the The Sun, who were happy with their report by Virginia Wheeler under the headline ‘Glitter stroke my arm and called me sweetie!” from the Vietnam –Bangkok leg.

CEOP will say of course that they notified the Thai authorities. They no doubt did. But their warning must have still been sitting in an in-tray in Police HQ.

Christine Beddoe of the charity ECPAT(End Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and the Trafficking of Children for Sexual Purposes) said that the British authorities tended to “turn a blind eye” to British nationals indulging in child sex tourism.

Sexual offences prevention orders were already in place, she said, which would compel registered paedophiles to tell the police when they intended to travel abroad, and allow the police to share that information with their colleagues at the destination country, if it is decided that the journey should even be allowed.

“But only five such orders were issued between 2004 and 2007 even though during that time some 15 British nationals have been charged in Thailand alone for sexual offence involving children”.

In the Independent newspaper, under the headline ‘The Real Scandal of Gary Glitter’,   Deborah Orr wrote: “Tabloid pursuit of Glitter may well be uncivilised and distasteful. …. But at least his lamentable tale has the potential to draw attention to a much more widespread horror. If the tabloids don’t track British paedophiles abroad, then no one tends to at all.”

And there Deborah Orr has it.  A British child sexual abuser in Thailand is much more likely to be identified by a member of the British public. And the public are much more inclined to call a British tabloid newspaper than Thai police, or even CEOP.

For two years now there has not been a Police Liaison officer at the British Embassy.  There is a member of the Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA) but calls about sex offenders in my experience will all be referred to London. It’s not serious enough under SOCA’s rules of engagement.

When people tip off civil servants things can go badly wrong.

Earlier this year a member of the British public living up in north east Thailand sent an email to the British Embassy notifying them that his neighbour a registered paedophile from Accrington, Northern England, had not only been cheating the British Social Security system, by illegally claiming British government benefits while in Thailand, but had also had secured a job teaching at a school in Bangkok.

The reply he got from the British Embassy was classic.

In the case of the benefits fraud the informant was told to contact the Department of Work and Pensions.  In the case of the Brit being a registered paedophile who was teaching Thai children in Bangkok,  the Embassy told the man to contact his local police station in Isaan!

No wonder he called the London SUN who subsequently called me.

On this occasion I also contacted Sudarat, who notified Bangkok Metropolitan Police’s Women and Children’s Investigation Branch.   I also notified a very senior policeman in the UK and through him CEOP.

The CEOP call turned out to be a totally pointless exercise. All  calls were immediately diverted to the press office. Calls to the Embassy were also re-routed to the Press Office.  I did not want any press information.

Besides waiting for an answer from the Embassy’s press department can often take days and the answer is not usually worth waiting for, in the sort of enquiries I tend to make.

Andy Chant and I investigated the Accrington man, Alan Smith, (right)and we came to the conclusion that in any of these cases it really was not worth telling the proper authorities first.

 We found the paedophile,  verified the case,  and the man was removed from the school and deported without CEOP’s help.

Sudarat told us she had much more problems with CEOP than even we had.

Earlier this year the CEOP’ chose as their Liaison Officer on one of their publicised training courses  a political secretary at the Embassy, famous for describing a journalist from a respected Sunday newspaper, as being ‘scum of the earth’ during the 2004 Tsunami.

A short while later this young man was back in London.  He had taken to writing a blog in ‘The Nation’ newspaper which had to be stopped after two days, after it was described as ,well at best ‘patronising’, and bloggers reported him (no doubt falsely) as having been seen in Soi Cowboy, a red light area,  with a $5 whore!”

There are hundreds of ‘angry Brits’ in Thailand, out of sorts possibly because they have failed to get a Thai girlfriend back to the UK, so its open season when a British diplomat puts himself on the net, especially if he likes telling people how he sings karaoke with Thai generals.

Many people are grateful for the British Embassy’s help and I know of many such cases.

But the culture of ‘If you say nothing or do nothing you can’t get into trouble’  (a British official’s off the record comment to me, referring to calls from the Press) can sometimes seem all pervasive.  

The Foreign  & Commonwealth Office, however  can and does look after itself and itself.

After the 2004 Tsunami an independent report carried out by the National Audit Office in the United Kingdom was scathing in its criticism of The British Embassy anf FCO effort.

The British Embassy were duly congratulated by a Junior Foreign Office Minister for doing a good job and published a complete but unconvincing rebuttal,  which you can still find on the internet.

(Picture left: British Embassy Tsunami Desk Phuket!)

This year the British Foreign Office are again being condemned for obstruction and deceipt in the case of a Briton Julie Ward, 28, who was murdered in the Masai Game Reserve in Kenya 20 years ago.

The independent report compiled by Jon Stoddart, now the Chief Constable of Durham in Northern England, accused the British authorities of ‘inconsistency, falsehoods and downright lies’.  The Foreign office has already issued a denial.

The above reports are not criticisms by newspapers. They are from British Government departments written by government officers.

The FCO I am glad to say did not however go to the aid of a retired diplomat who was caught in Pattaya by a British Sunday newspaper and exposed under the headline ’Her Majesty’s Vice-Consul and child pervert ring’ for dealing in naked pictures of under-aged boys.

He ran a coffee shop as part of the ‘Boyz Boyz Boyz’ complex in Pattaya - see Fighting for Justice

But the whole point here is that If CEOP want to operate in Thailand to protect children from Britain’s child sex predators they should be talking to people here who actually know the business, who the predators are, and how they evade the law.  In short they need to get down and dirty.

The British government, and others, have spent hundreds of thousands of pounds, on courses to train people, especially police, how to deal with child sex offenders.

Cash would be better spent on individual cases to ensure justice. Because the cash paedophiles have enables them to elude justice. This is the reality.

I have been in Thailand for 20 years and have seen scores of paedophiles walk. British, Germans, Dutch, French, Swiss,  American, the lot.

A whole series of foreigners, among them three Britons, were arrested in Pattaya earlier this year, for offences against children.  Not many of them are still in the system.  One Briton in particular, known to the kids as ‘The Ghost’ has been bailed again, even though his latest offence was committed, while on bail appealing a 14 year jail sentence for the rape of two under-aged girls.

Only high profile paedophiles, such as ‘Mr.Swirly’ or Gary Glitter , appear to be unable to beat  the system, and usually only after an international furore. This is a basic fact of life here.

British law enforcement officers such as those from CEOP, have to go through the Royal Thai Police Foreign Affairs Division.  All well and good. But there they have to join the queue along with the world’s other police forces and the RTP often have bigger and more lucrative fish to fry.

It is at this point that a lot of back scratching, the ritual exchange of police divisional and departmental shields and plaques ,  the dinners, the Embassy socials, all come in to play.

Their job would be best served in the middle of the action rather than just familiarity tours of Pattaya’s Sunee Plaza.

Until then their motto, ‘Protecting Children Everywhere’, may just be a slogan and we’ll just have to leave it to those who are actually reeling in paedophiles abroad.  The international and tabloid press.

Tracking down Gary Glitter

 

 

 

 

Scandal as ‘child rapist’ released on bail again in Thailand - March 20 08

 British paedophile ‘The Ghost’ accused of child rape ‘three times’ is arrested AGAIN in Thailand - Daily Mail

Stepfather of ex-soccer star accused of abducting Thai girls - Irish Independent March 21 07

Sixth arrested for convicted paedophile - Irish Independent March 19 08

From Andrew Drummond, Pattaya

 20th March 2008

The most notorious British paedophile in Thailand walked free from a police station again today after being granted £6,500 bail for the alleged sexual abuse of an eight year old boy.

Maurice Praill 02

 Maurice Praill, 77, formerly of Harold Hill, Essex, was arrested yesterday while already on bail for two other child sex offences. But he has been arrested in Thailand numerous times and been released.

 Police in Pattaya said today they raised the bail to the maximum amount allowed under law but Praill, known locally as ‘The Ghost’ was able to meet the fee. They declined to discuss why he was given bail at all.

Two years after his arrival in the late eighties, Praill married a 15-yr-old girl, the daughter of his maid, in a marriage seemingly blessed by Buddhist monks. The girl fled after three months.

 In December 2001 he was convicted of the rape of two young girls, but the formal charge only came after a series of arrests in the resort for which he was released after the local press reported he had paid ‘fines to local police’.

 But after his conviction he was immediately released on bail, and when he lost his appeal in 2004, curiously he got bail again to appeal to Thailand’s Supreme Court.

 In what child protection agencies describe as a ‘scandalous state of affairs’ Praill was arrested again last year for abusing two girls aged 9 and 11 at his condominium in the resort but within two weeks was out on bail again of £8000.

 Child welfare agencies have long believed that a fund exists subscribed to by an international paedophile group to pay ‘costs’ for members arrested in Thailand

Praill was arrested at his new home in Bongkot Villa, Pattaya, after a police surveillance team saw an eight-yr-old boy being delivered to his home in a motorcycle side platform, normally used by the driver for transporting goods to market.

 Thai police were called in after a member of the Child Protection Centre passed on complaints from the parents of the eight-year-old boy.

 Praill, who was previously arrested for abusing young girls, had now turned to young boys, said Police Colonel Khanisorn Yuwawithaya, who led the latest investigation.

 The police had been contacted by Supakorn Noja, of  the Pattaya Child Protection Centre, said Commander Kanisorn. “We formed a team and conducted surveillance. We witnessed the eight year old boy being delivered to his house. We arrested Praill when he was in the shower at his home in.”

 Sudarat Sudarat Thailand’s National Child Protection Committee described the Praill case as ‘scandalous’.

 “He could have been abusing our children for twenty years yet nobody has put him behind bars. I am shocked they have let him go again.

”We have spoken to some of his child victims. They call him ‘The Ghost’ because of his frightening appearance.”

 Britain, she added, had spent hundreds of thousand of pounds on much publicized projects accompanied by Embassy cocktail parties to educate the Thai police and justice system how to deal with child sex offenders.

 “This makes those efforts look very weak.  The Thai justice system will have to take more notice of the safety of the victims and possible future victims. He should never have been given bail. Paedophiles are repeat offenders,” she said.

 Praill  ran a video hire company called Phoenix Entertainment based in Chingford, Essex. His stepson footballer Jon Goodman, was capped for Ireland and also played for Millwall and Wimbledon. He is believed now to have cancelled all contact with his stepfather.

Praill’s lawyer, Nitiwat Pattanasarn, said: “Maurice Praill denies the allegations against him.

At his home in Pattaya after being freed Praill said: “It looks like the police are targetting me. I blame the child welfare agencies for targetting me. They are setting me up.  Yes I like young people.  I have always had younger girlfriends.

Picture: Maurice Praill at his wedding to the daughter of his maid. He paid 40,000 baht. Then about US$1000.Maurice Praill with Thai bride 1

 A second Briton, named a Ronald David Wiener, aged 59, was also relased on bail in Pattaya for sodomy in connection with another eight year old boy, who was playing on the beach while his parents ran a food stall. Wiener, from London, allegedly offered the boy the equivalent of £12 to go with him The cases are not connected.

Police said he willingly admitted the offences and came to Pattaya because he was told he could find young boys there. They also took away a number of pornographic videos of young boys having sex.
 

Long-necked women kidnapped again for Thailand’s human zoos

From Andrew Drummond, Bangkok, November 7th

Long-necked women kidnapped for Thailand’s lucrative ‘human zoos

Padaung01 Tourist gives sweets to Padaung 1 2 3 4

Long-necked women kidnapped for Thailand’s lucrative ‘human zoos

From Andrew Drummond, Bangkok, November 7th

Police in Thailand are investigating new allegations that unscrupulous tour operators have kidnapped Burmese long-necked women for use in lucrative tourist camps known as ‘human zoos’.

Six members of the Padaung Burmese hill tribe have been reported missing from refugee camps in the Northern Thai district of Mae Hong Son, 400 miles north of Bangkok and police have set up an investigation team to try and find them.

Police Major Worapot Phuttawong said: “We believe that the only purpose for their kidnapping is for exhibition in these tourist camps over the peak holiday season which is beginning now and will continue over Christmas.”

The missing persons report was lodged by a Padaung man called Yathaue, aged 43, who says his wife Masae, aged 34, and eight year old daughter and six year old son disappeared after she went to pick the children up from school in Huai Pukaeng, near Mae Hong Son.

When he went looking for them in another long-necked community in Baan Huai Seu Theo, villagers there complained that a 21-yr-old long necked woman, Mali, had been kidnapped along with a 10-yr-old boy Layeu and an 11-yr-old girl called Keuboma.

The kidnapping of Burmese long necked woman from Burma for tourist camps in Thailand was first exposed by ‘The Times’ ten years ago.

A Thai businessmen was arrested and charged with detaining people against their will.  The Governor of the Tourism Authority of Thailand said at the time that ‘human zoos run by unscrupulous businessmen’ were harming the county’s reputation.

The businessmen was, however, later acquitted in a local court, as indeed he had boasted he would be, and since then numerous ‘long-necked camps’ have been started in the province of Chiang Mai.

Legally the only place the long-necked tribe can reside is in the refugee camps in Mae Hong Son on the Thai-Burma border, but Thai authorites have turned a blind eye and issued permits for the long necked women to be employed as ‘farm labourers’ elsewhere.

They do no farming. The children do not have access to schools and are required to sit in their huts with their mothers all day and weave or dance for busloads of tourists.
 Sudarat Sereewat, Secretary of The Fight against Child Exploitation (FACE) who organised the previous rescue of nine adults and 21 children from a ‘human zoo’ in Thaton, Northern Thailand said: “If these children have indeed been kidnapped for a human zoos the authorities should come down on the culprits in the strongest way possible. It is quite shameful.  I hope no authorites are involved in covering anything up.”

*Prisoners in a Human Zoo