According to Thai media reports, Myanmar handed over the second batch of Chinese victims of transnational telecommunications fraud to Thailand through the second Thai-Myanmar Friendship Bridge port. According to Chinese arrangements, six chartered flights will be coordinated to carry out the repatriation mission on the same day.
From early morning, the Thai Special Operations Forces have been strengthening vigilance at the Mae Sot Second Customs Port, continuously maintaining the security order of the personnel handover core area. According to on-site scheduling, the scale of this batch of transfers has increased by 300 people compared to the first day, and the total number of repatriations has shown a stepwise upward trend.
It is noteworthy that this time, the Thai side set up a green light-shielding wall in the handover area to implement fully enclosed management. Aerial footage shows that the Chinese victims only appeared in the media as silhouettes, and all personnel, holding identity documents and lining up to enter the border inspection building, were subjected to the "two soldiers escorting one person" custody measure.
The Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Defense of Thailand, Prawit, previously emphasized that this measure aims to implement the principle of protecting the privacy of victims, requiring the media to strictly adhere to non-intrusive filming standards.
At the border inspection stage, the Thai Immigration Bureau, according to Section 12(7) of the 1979 Immigration Act, refused entry to all involved individuals and simultaneously issued a TM35 form deportation order. All personnel were entered into the immigration bureau's biometric identification system and included in the national database of persons banned from entry for dynamic control.
After completing the legal procedures, the deportees were taken by special vehicle to Mae Sot International Airport, where they underwent customs security and epidemic prevention checks before boarding a chartered flight operated by China Southern Airlines to return to China. Analysts point out that this large-scale cross-border joint law enforcement action marks the entry of China, Myanmar, and Thailand into a substantive phase of cooperation in combating telecommunications network fraud crimes.