After their family requested assistance, Thai police were conducting a fact-finding research into the departure of two additional Chinese nationals: a female model and a female.
Pol Gen Thatchai Pitaneelaboot, inspector-general with the Royal Thai Police Office (RTPO ), said foreign media had reported the disappearance of Chinese model Yang Zeqi, who went missing near the Thai-Myanmar border.  ,
Similar to Wang Xing’s disappearance last week in the same location, Wang went missing and was trafficked to a Myawaddy fraud center.
Wang, 31, also known by his step name Xing Xing, comfortably returned to Thailand.
Yang’s family reported his departure on social media, according to Pol Gen Thatchai, and requested assistance from him. Authorities were launching an exploration, he said.
Before he went missing, the inspector-general said, Yang received a message on WeChat that said he had passed an exam for a video. He boarded trip VZ 3719 from Beijing on Dec 20 to Suvarnabhumi airports, arriving at 6.16am. He took a vehicle from the airport and later switched to a different vehicle, which took him to the frontier, according to a “film staff team.” He wrote a companion a concept on December 21 saying he was depressed.
He was videos calling his mother on December 29 while wearing dark and his hands on a table. Despite the fact that he claimed to be safe, he sustained eye injury. Finally, his phone was disconnected.
Relatives soon lodged a complaint with Chinese officers and called the Thai and Myanmar embassies for assistance after receiving the movie call.
After her parents Wu Weidong requested assistance from Pol Gen Kitrat Phanphet, the head of the country’s officers, officials were also looking for a 21-year-old Chinese woman named Wu Jiaqi.
Friends and family were unable to call Ms. Jiaqi after she arrived in Thailand on January 6. On January 8, a complaint was made with the Suvarnabhumi airport.
Police were looking for answers as to where she was abounding from the airport, according to Pol Gen Thatchai, and were looking into closed-circuit tv cameras along the way.