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Raid on Bangkok Massage Parlor Reveals Trafficked Sex Workers, Corrupt Cops

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The raid at the Nataree Massage, a massage parlour on Ratchadaphisek Road detained 121 women, including under-age sex workers and foreigners.

The raid at the Nataree Massage, a massage parlour on Ratchadaphisek Road detained 121 women, including under-age sex workers and foreigners.

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BANGKOK – A raid on Nataree Massage a large Bangkok massage parlor  notorious for its ‘soapy massages’ has found underage sex workers and logbooks detailing big kickbacks to corrupt cops and officials, investigators said Wednesday.

Thailand’s police force has a reputation for graft, but it is rare for authorities to reveal so clearly how the protection rackets work.

More than 100 officers from Thailand’s Interior Ministry raided Nataree Massage, which is in downtown Bangkok and popular with locals and foreigners.

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During the Tuesday evening raid they found documents detailing alleged payments worth thousands of dollars to police and city officials.

“The account book with the hush money is very clear in detailing which agencies and persons received the money. Most are police and police agencies,” Ronnarong Thipsiri, director of the Territorial Defence Office, which was involved in the raid, told AFP.

“We did not inform police ahead of the raid because we had information that they were benefiting from this operation,” Ronnarong added.

A photograph of one log book page, taken by local reporters who joined the raid, showed more than $10,000 worth of payments made to multiple police officers and law enforcement agencies over a 20-day period in March this year.

Ronnarong, who said the photo was legitimate, added that one section of the brothel’s account book showed 19 million baht ($539,000) in takings, though he did not say over what period of time the money had been made.

The raid also uncovered multiple underage sex workers under the age of 18 inside the brothel, most of them foreign – a stark reminder of how impoverished teenage migrants continue to be lured into Thailand’s sex trade.

Ronnarong said around 90 per cent of the 121 women found working in the brothel at the time of the raid were Myanmar nationals, primarily ethnic minority women from the two country’s border regions.

“Three held documents proving they are under the age of 18,” he told AFP, adding that investigators believed at least 12 others were suspected of being underage.

The department acted on a complaint by a non-governmental organisation about girls being trafficked at the parlour.

The detained women and girls, including foreign nationals, worked as prostitutes at the parlour, Pol Gen Adul said.

He said at least one Thai and eight Myanmar nationals were clearly victims of human trafficking while 12 others were categorised as “probable” trafficking victims.

Those who consented to work as prostitutes will be prosecuted. Others forced to sell themselves and under-aged girls will be sent to Kredtrakarn Protection and Occupational Development Centre, the Department of Provincial Administration said.

Prostitution is technically illegal in Thailand but is ubiquitous across the country.

Despite its reputation as a global sex tourism destination, the vast majority of sex work caters for locals.

Because of their criminalised status, brothel owners and sex workers often have to offer protection payments to police or criminal gangs to ward off arrest or closure.

Activists have long advocated for the trade to be legalised to better protect the many women, men and transgender people who sell sex commercially.

But it is a cause few politicians have been willing to embrace in a country that remains socially conservative when it comes to sex.

The head of Bangkok’s police force, Lieutenant General Sanit Mahathavorn, told reporters on Wednesday he had appointed a task force to investigate the hush money payment allegations.

The investigation being conducted into the human-trafficking case consists of three core parts, deputy spokesman of the National Police Office, Piyaphan Pingmuang, said.

Pol Maj Gen Piyaphan said the investigation focuses on individuals involved in trafficking the women, on police who failed to do their jobs, and on police who may have profited from the alleged sex trade at the parlour.

Pol Lt Gen Sanit said the Interior Ministry will decide whether to close the massage parlour. Its owner will be charged with running a prostitution business, acting as a procurer, opening the premises to the sex trade and being involved in human trafficking.

Multiple large brothels, which have not been raided, also operate in the area.

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