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13 Foreign Nationals Held in Songkhla with Fake Entry Stamps

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Pictures courtesy of Daily News

 

Immigration police in Songkhla have arrested 13 African nationalstravelling with forged entry stamps in their passports, believed to be attempting to reach Bangkok via illegal entry routes. Authorities suspect the group may be linked to online scam operations or human trafficking networks operating across the region.

 

The arrests took place on 11 October, when the Songkhla Immigration Investigation Team, working with the Tourist Police and Thung Lung Police Station, stopped a passenger van at a petrol station along Highway 2 in Ban Phru, Hat Yai district. Officers found nine foreignersonboard, including five Kenyans (four men and one woman), two Ugandans (two men) and two Nigerians (one man and one woman). Although each had a passport, investigators quickly identified fake immigration entry stamps.

 

The Thai driver told police he had been hired by Mr. Naser Khan, 52, to transport the group to Bangkok’s Mo Chit Bus Terminal. Khan admitted he had been contacted by a Malaysian broker to escort 13 foreignerswho had entered Thailand illegally through a natural border crossing in Tak Bai, Narathiwat province, and were to be delivered to Bangkok for a fee of 4,920 USDT (approximately 160,000 baht) paid in digital currency.


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Khan confessed that, before departure, he gave the group’s passports to an associate known as “Bang Nong” in Tak Bai to stamp them with fake Thai immigration seals to deceive officers. Since the van could carry only nine people, the remaining four were sent on a public bus to Bangkok. Police later intercepted these four individuals in Cha-Uat district, Nakhon Si Thammarat, with help from regional immigration units.

 

All 13 foreigners were charged with illegal entry and use of falsified immigration documents, while Khan was charged with harbouring and assisting illegal migrants. Police are now investigating possible links to cross-border scam syndicates.

 

Pol. Maj. Gen. Chutharet Yingyongdamrongsakul, Commander of Immigration Division 6, said the group claimed they were only visiting Thailand for a short trip. However, security reports indicate that smugglers increasingly use Malaysian routes to bring high-risk individuals into Thailand en route to neighbouring countries where scammer and online gambling operations are based.

 

Authorities have ordered further questioning to determine the group’s real purpose and to assess whether they may be victims of human traffickingunder Thailand’s National Referral Mechanism (NRM) procedures.

 

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Key Takeaways

 

• Thirteen African nationals were arrested in Songkhla for entering Thailand illegally with fake entry stamps.

• The suspects allegedly paid over 160,000 baht in cryptocurrency to brokers arranging the journey from Malaysia.

• Police are investigating links to scam or trafficking networks and applying NRM protocols if victims are identified.

 

Related Stories

 

Sri-Lankan-man-caught-using-fake-French-passport-at-airport

 

Police-bust-cross-border-human-smuggling-network

 

 

image.png  Adapted by Asean Now from Dailynews 2025-10-12

 

 

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