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Malaysia PM ‘deeply concerned’ by mass graves

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Prime Minister Najib Razak said on Monday he was "deeply concerned" by the first discovery of mass graves of suspected illegal migrants in northern Malaysia and vowed to find those responsible.

"I am deeply concerned with graves found on Malaysian soil, purportedly connected to people-smuggling," he said on his Facebook and Twitter accounts.

"We will find those responsible."

Malaysia's home minister announced Sunday that mass graves were found near jungle camps along the border with Thailand, further evidence of the lethal nature of a human-trafficking trade that has blown up in to a regional crisis.

Police in neighbouring Thailand in early May had found secret human-trafficking camps on their side of the border and dozens of shallow graves. These are the first found in Malaysia.

Officials have yet to say how many bodies are in the Malaysian graves or their precise locations, but the country's police chief was expected to hold a press conference at 11:00 am (0300 GMT).

Prime Minister Najib Razak said on May 25  2015  he was 'deeply concerned' by the first di...
Prime Minister Najib Razak said on May 25, 2015, he was 'deeply concerned' by the first discovery of mass graves of suspected illegal migrants in northern Malaysia and vowed to find those responsible
Mohd Rasfan, AFP/File

There may be dozens or even hundreds of corpses in the graves, Malaysian media reports have said, citing unidentified sources.

Malaysia's Perlis state, where the graves were found, is near where Thailand found its graves.

The area is said by anti-trafficking groups to be a key stop on a route that funnels migrants from Bangladesh and Myanmar into Malaysia and beyond.

Thailand launched a crackdown on human-smuggling following the discovery of its mass graves.

The move appears to have caused nervous traffickers to abandon their human cargo at sea, leaving boats filled with hundreds of starving migrants seeking to land in Malaysia, Thailand and Indonesia.

After initially turning them away, Malaysia and Indonesia last week bowed to international pressure, saying they would admit boat people pending their repatriation or resettlement elsewhere.

Rights groups have long accused Malaysian authorities of not doing enough to contain human-smuggling.

Prime Minister Najib Razak said on Monday he was “deeply concerned” by the first discovery of mass graves of suspected illegal migrants in northern Malaysia and vowed to find those responsible.

“I am deeply concerned with graves found on Malaysian soil, purportedly connected to people-smuggling,” he said on his Facebook and Twitter accounts.

“We will find those responsible.”

Malaysia’s home minister announced Sunday that mass graves were found near jungle camps along the border with Thailand, further evidence of the lethal nature of a human-trafficking trade that has blown up in to a regional crisis.

Police in neighbouring Thailand in early May had found secret human-trafficking camps on their side of the border and dozens of shallow graves. These are the first found in Malaysia.

Officials have yet to say how many bodies are in the Malaysian graves or their precise locations, but the country’s police chief was expected to hold a press conference at 11:00 am (0300 GMT).

Prime Minister Najib Razak said on May 25  2015  he was 'deeply concerned' by the first di...

Prime Minister Najib Razak said on May 25, 2015, he was 'deeply concerned' by the first discovery of mass graves of suspected illegal migrants in northern Malaysia and vowed to find those responsible
Mohd Rasfan, AFP/File

There may be dozens or even hundreds of corpses in the graves, Malaysian media reports have said, citing unidentified sources.

Malaysia’s Perlis state, where the graves were found, is near where Thailand found its graves.

The area is said by anti-trafficking groups to be a key stop on a route that funnels migrants from Bangladesh and Myanmar into Malaysia and beyond.

Thailand launched a crackdown on human-smuggling following the discovery of its mass graves.

The move appears to have caused nervous traffickers to abandon their human cargo at sea, leaving boats filled with hundreds of starving migrants seeking to land in Malaysia, Thailand and Indonesia.

After initially turning them away, Malaysia and Indonesia last week bowed to international pressure, saying they would admit boat people pending their repatriation or resettlement elsewhere.

Rights groups have long accused Malaysian authorities of not doing enough to contain human-smuggling.

AFP
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