A MAJOR cross-border rescue operation has successfully recovered two Malaysian men abducted from Kelantan and held captive for two days in Mundok, Thailand, exposing a dark nexus of drug-related debts and undocumented migrant smuggling.
Kelantan Police Chief Datuk Mohd Yusoff Mamat confirmed that the victims, aged 51 and 35, were located by Thai authorities before being safely repatriated to Malaysia.
The investigation revealed that one of the rescued hostages carries a extensive criminal past with 24 prior records, while the entire plot was engineered as leverage after a relative failed to settle a 33,000 Ringgit underworld debt.
The actual borrower, a 25-year-old man, and his girlfriend have also been arrested and are now remanded until 22 June, Mohd Yusoff stated during a press briefing outlining the rapid developments in the case.
The abductions, which took place in separate incidents across Pasir Mas and Tumpat on 6 June, triggered a swift crackdown by Malaysian authorities.
Five individuals, comprising four men and one woman, were initially arrested to assist with the investigation before detectives tracked down the primary borrower whose unpaid liabilities sparked the transnational incident.
Despite the successful rescues and local arrests, federal investigators are still aggressively hunting for two key masterminds who managed to slip past border checkpoints into neighbouring territory.
The fugitives have been identified as 32-year-old Mohamad Syamsul Azroy Che Anuar and 40-year-old Hamzah Muhamad, both of whom possess a dozen prior criminal entries for narcotics and violent offences.
The two suspects also burned a Perodua Myvi belonging to them at Gelang Emas, Pasir Mas, believed to be the vehicle used in the kidnapping, Mohd Yusoff disclosed, highlighting the lengths to which the perpetrators went to destroy vital forensic evidence.
The police have formalised an emergency request with Thai law enforcement agencies to track, corner, and extradite the remaining fugitives, who are strongly suspected to be utilising local safehouses within the border zone to evade capture. - June 15, 2026