Court Denies Bail for 33 in Fake Thai Citizenship Racket
A criminal network falsifying Thai citizenship documents for foreign children has resulted in 33 arrests, with courts denying bail over national security concerns. The scheme involved recruiting Thai nationals as fake biological fathers and
Police are intensifying their investigation into the "Chinese Children" network, which illegally falsified Thai nationality documents for foreign children. So far, 33 suspects have been arrested and denied bail due to concerns the scheme threatens national security. On July 13, Deputy Police Commissioner General Samran Nuonmma chaired a coordination meeting with representatives from the Metropolitan Police Bureau, the Interior Ministry, the Office of the Attorney General, and the Department of Special Investigation (DSI) to track progress in the case of a criminal network engaged in filing false birth registrations for foreign children, dubbed the "Chinese Children" operation.
Investigation revealed that the network recruited Thai nationals to serve as fake biological fathers and hired them out to file false birth registrations for foreign children. They collaborated with corrupt officials at hospitals and civil registration offices to issue fraudulent state documents to children who had no legal right to Thai nationality. This enabled foreign children to illegally acquire Thai citizenship based on bloodline and birth within Thailand, granting them full access to state rights and welfare including education, healthcare, social security, and property ownership. Authorities assess the scheme poses a serious threat to the civil registration system and could compromise national security in the long term.
As of the latest update, authorities have obtained 35 arrest warrants. Police have apprehended 33 suspects, while one fled abroad and one remains at large domestically. Among the 27 detained suspects are four Chinese fathers, ten Chinese mothers, and thirteen fake Thai fathers. The court has rejected bail for all detainees and remanded them in custody pending trial. Police continue to expand the investigation to identify all network members, trace financial flows, investigate links to government officials, and pursue charges against all parties involved in document forgery and abuse of authority.