PUBLISHED: 3 September 2023 at 4:00 p.m.
CHIANG RAI: In the Shan state of Myanmar, a lady from Udon Thani was rescued by Thai and Myanmar officials after being the victim of human trafficking.
The 29-year-old lady, who went by the name Nam, was tricked by Chinese agents to offer sexual services to its call center staff in the position.
After the sufferer requested assistance through a voter writer’s Facebook page called Ninja Today, the situation was brought to the attention of Chiang Rai law, immigration authorities and the Ministry of Social Development and Human Security.
According to Pol Maj Gen Suphanat Charoen-ruengsakul, commander of the Immigration Bureau’s Division 5, the officials contacted their rivals in Myanmar and were able to return the lady to Thailand on August 31.
Nam revealed to the media yesterday that she had previously worked as a restaurant waiter in Bangkok.
A TikTok user approached her in May and offered her a job in” customer relations” with 900 Chinese yuan( roughly 4, 380 baht ) per day( with 450 Yuan to be subtracted for expenses ).
She initially declined the offer, but after they bothered her, she eventually agreed. In June, Nam traveled to Chiang Rai in the north and, with the help of a nearby smuggler, traversed the Mae Sai district’s healthy border region.
The woman was taken to a two-story tower surrounded by barbed wire once she arrived in Myanmar. She was made to sign a Chinese-written deal that would connect her for six weeks.
She claimed that instead of working as a waiter, she was compelled to engage in sexual activity with call center crew female employees. Most of them were Chinese citizens who, like her, had been tricked into participating in the procedure.
She claimed that after refusing to have sex, she endured electric shocks, handcuffing, a back injury, waterboarding, and some times of starvation. She claimed that intercourse was also brought to the location by other people.
Nam cautioned Thais against accepting what appeared to be high-paying career presents in other nations.
According to the policeman, some traffickers look for potential victims on social media and mobile apps.