Representational Image.
Dhaka:
Bangladesh police have arrested a human trafficking "godfather" in a fresh crackdown on smugglers amid fears of a resumption of the racket that sparked a regional migrant crisis earlier this year, an officer said today.
Police have arrested at least 20 traffickers in the past month including alleged kingpin Dil Mohammad on the weekend in the southern smuggling town of Teknaf bordering Myanmar.
Teknaf police inspector Kabir Hossain said Mohammad, 45, was arrested after arriving back in Bangladesh from Malaysia.
"Mohammad has been wanted in Malaysia and Thailand for smuggling hundreds of poor Bangladeshis to Malaysia by using rickety boats in the Bay of Bengal," Hossain told AFP.
Bangladesh targeted smugglers in May after persecuted Rohingyas from Myanmar and economic migrants from Bangladesh were abandoned at sea en route to Southeast Asia.
A crackdown by Thailand led to the unravelling of people-smuggling networks that saw thousands stranded in open waters and dumped in jungle camps.
Bangladesh smugglers who went into hiding at the time have since returned to their villages now that the monsoon season is ending.
"Gradually the fugitive smugglers are returning home after the end of the monsoon anticipating the hit is gone," Hossain said.
With seas expected to be calmer in coming weeks, experts said smugglers were looking to restart voyages to Thailand and Malaysia.
"The smugglers have been accumulating strength for a fresh start to their business. We've reports their grassroots operations have become active," Shakirul Islam, a migration expert, told AFP.
The crisis in May shone a spotlight on the booming human smuggling industry that preys on the desperation of the thousands trying to escape grinding poverty in Bangladesh or persecution in Myanmar.
In May, Bangladesh police said they shot dead four smugglers in gunfights and arrested 90 others, following the discovery in Thailand of mass graves of migrants.
Police have arrested at least 20 traffickers in the past month including alleged kingpin Dil Mohammad on the weekend in the southern smuggling town of Teknaf bordering Myanmar.
Teknaf police inspector Kabir Hossain said Mohammad, 45, was arrested after arriving back in Bangladesh from Malaysia.
"Mohammad has been wanted in Malaysia and Thailand for smuggling hundreds of poor Bangladeshis to Malaysia by using rickety boats in the Bay of Bengal," Hossain told AFP.
Bangladesh targeted smugglers in May after persecuted Rohingyas from Myanmar and economic migrants from Bangladesh were abandoned at sea en route to Southeast Asia.
A crackdown by Thailand led to the unravelling of people-smuggling networks that saw thousands stranded in open waters and dumped in jungle camps.
Bangladesh smugglers who went into hiding at the time have since returned to their villages now that the monsoon season is ending.
"Gradually the fugitive smugglers are returning home after the end of the monsoon anticipating the hit is gone," Hossain said.
With seas expected to be calmer in coming weeks, experts said smugglers were looking to restart voyages to Thailand and Malaysia.
"The smugglers have been accumulating strength for a fresh start to their business. We've reports their grassroots operations have become active," Shakirul Islam, a migration expert, told AFP.
The crisis in May shone a spotlight on the booming human smuggling industry that preys on the desperation of the thousands trying to escape grinding poverty in Bangladesh or persecution in Myanmar.
In May, Bangladesh police said they shot dead four smugglers in gunfights and arrested 90 others, following the discovery in Thailand of mass graves of migrants.
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