Chinese teen jumps from car to seek police help

Chinese teen jumps from car to seek police help

A 16-year-old Chinese teenager, standing and wearing a black T-shirt, gives details about his escape to officers at Prachon Chai police station in Buri Ram province. (Photo: Surachai Piragsa)
A 16-year-old Chinese teenager, standing and wearing a black T-shirt, gives details about his escape to officers at Prachon Chai police station in Buri Ram province. (Photo: Surachai Piragsa)

BURI RAM: A Chinese teenager jumped from a car to seek help from police in Prakhon Chai district in the early hours of Friday, claiming that another Chinese national had offered him and his friends restaurant jobs in Vietnam, but they were instead sent to Laos and later to Thailand.

Pol Col Witsanu Apornpong, chief of Prakhon Chai station, along with police, immigration and military intelligence officers, questioned the 16-year-old boy identified only as Sukai, after he leapt from a moving car along Highway 24 on the Nang Rang route. 

Upon reaching Prakhon Chai around half past midnight, Sukai immediately opened a car door and ran toward the police station. Footage of closed-circuit television (CCTV) cameras in the area captured the incident, as he was seen running along the road.

During questioning, the teenager told police via an interpreter that he was from Hubei province in China, and he had been persuaded by a Chinese acquittance to work at a restaurant in Vietnam. However, he and 10 other friends were taken to Laos instead.

A boy is seen sprinting along a road towards a nearby police station in Prakhon Chai district, Buri Ram. (CCTV picture)

According to the Sukai's statement, he and the others were taken to separate places upon arriving in Laos. He, a Chinese friend and two Thais were later led to cross the border to Thailand. A car was sent to pick them up, but thet did not know where the driver would take them. Upon seeing a signpost with the word "Police",  he decided to jump from the vehicle and ran to the police station to seek help. His friend dared not flee.

A police source said the Chinese friend could now be contacted after seeking help from police at Wang Chao station in Tak province. Sukai's mother had contacted the Thai consulate in China to help send him back.

Police said there were no clear details in this case regarding whether Sukai and the others had been illegally smuggled to work in Thailand or had been coerced into working illegally, such as working for a phone scam gang.

Do you like the content of this article?
COMMENT (7)