Thailand is handing down verdicts in its biggest human trafficking trial, with more than 100 defendants accused of smuggling and trafficking refugees and migrants on the Thailand-Malaysia border.
By midday local time on Wednesday, a judge had announced 21 guilty verdicts from 103 defendants.
More judgements are expected later in the day.
A Thai army general, Myanmar nationals, Thai police officers and local politicians are among those accused.
Arrests began in 2015 following the discovery of 36 bodies in shallow graves in southern Thailand.
That discovery exposed networks which trafficked Rohingya Muslims fleeing persecution in Myanmar and held them for ransom in jungle camps before they were granted passage to Malaysia.
The trial began that year, when authorities said traffickers held migrants in the camps as hostages until relatives were able to pay for their release.
Many never made it out.
Thailand has yet to release a full report on the graves and the results of post-mortem forensic testing.
Rights groups say trafficking networks were largely left intact by the 2015 crackdown and trial.
"We believe that the crackdown is only a disruption of a trafficking network but that network is still very much well in place," said Amy Smith, an executive director of rights group Fortify Rights.
Smith also said the current trial has a narrow focus.
"We expect there are many more perpetrators out there," she said. "This is a big business with big money."
Sunai Phasuk, a senior researcher on Thailand at Human Rights Watch, said: "There needs to be more prosecution against traffickers as well as more work on rehabilitation of trafficking victims."
Lengthy legal process
The legal process in handing down verdicts is lengthy in Thailand, and it may take hours before the judge reveals the exact details of the verdicts to a packed Bangkok court.
The trial has been marred by allegations of intimidation against witnesses, interpreters and police investigators.
Thailand's government denies that trafficking syndicates are still flourishing and has said it has largely eliminated human trafficking in the country.
Journalists were not allowed in the court room on Wednesday, but proceedings were relayed on television screens provided by the court.
Thailand has historically been a source, destination and transit country for men, women and children who are often smuggled and trafficked from poorer, neighbouring countries including Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar to work in Thailand or further afield in Malaysia, often as labourers and sex workers.
Mass grave
Last month the US state department left Thailand on a Tier 2 Watchlist, just above the lowest ranking of Tier 3, in its annual Trafficking in Persons (TIP) Report because it did not do enough to tackle human smuggling and trafficking.
Al Jazeera's Scott Heidler, reporting from Bangkok, said the scale of the trial meant the verdicts would take several hours to read and the hearing could last into tomorrow.
"Most [human rights] observers are hoping that there are going to be follow-up cases because they also believe - when you look at this case - we're looking at a very small area; this one mass grave they found along the border in 2015 and one ring that supplied those camps with the people coming across down from Myanmar," he said.
"Human rights observers are hoping that this is just the beginning and there will be many more cases to come."
All the defendants earlier pleaded not guilty and were placed under pre-trial detention.
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