The Criminal Court on Wednesday will rule on a major human-trafficking case involving as many as 103 defendants, including a senior military officer, Manas Kongpan.
The ruling is due to be delivered at 8.30am.
The trial began in 2015 as suspected syndicates were accused of 
trafficking migrants, notably ethnic Rohingya, to Thailand and via the 
Kingdom to other destinations.
Thai and Myanmar citizens were arrested that year following the 
discovery of a mass grave in jungle shelters in the border district of 
Sadao, in Songkhla province, used by traffickers to hold the migrants.
Investigations indicated a number of security officials as well as Thai 
and Myanmar civilians had taken the migrants – originally from 
Bangladesh and western Myanmar – to Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia.
The case attracted international attention to the regional migrant 
crisis across the Indian Ocean, and countries were criticized for 
ignoring the problem.
                            
Thailand was then downgraded to the lowest level – Tier 3 – in the US 
State Department’s “Trafficking in Persons” (TIP) report in both 2014 
and 2015.
The Thai government has since taken a number of measures, including 
amendment of its trafficking law and the creation of a special division 
in the Criminal Court to handle human-trafficking cases in particular.
Wednesday’s ruling is the first such case for the new division.
Thailand, meanwhile, remains on the Watch List in Washington’s annual TIP report.
Source - TheNation 
