"We will take immediate action against those who have trafficked people illegally. We are trying to identify and track them down," State Minister for Home Affairs Asaduzzaman Khan Kamal said.
He said a lack of security around the 250 kilometres border region in northeastern Chittagong Hill Tracts adjacent to Myanmar and open to Bay of Bengal was largely responsible for the massive human trafficking.
Kamal said paramilitary Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB) were ordered to set up border outposts to prevent trafficking.
According to Kamal, the government is also working to secure the northeastern Cox's Bazar frontier with Myanmar by issuing separate identity cards to fishermen in the Bay of Bengal to stop human trafficking.
Also Read
"Separate number-plates will also be given to the goods-carrying trawlers," he said.
Bangladesh earlier this month launched a crackdown against human traffickers. Five suspected slave traders were killed in shootouts with police along its south-eastern coastlines.
Reports suggested that Bangladeshi and Rohingya migrants on board a foundering vessel off Indonesia fought with axes, knives and metals bars in vicious clashes that left over 100 dead while food and water dwindled on their rickety vessel as it drifted in Indonesian waters.
UN refugee agency UNHCR, rights agency OHCHR, and International Organisation for Migration (IOM) in a joint statement today urged "the leaders of Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand, to protect migrants and refugees stranded on vessels in the Bay of Bengal and the Andaman Sea, to facilitate safe disembarkation, and to give priority to saving lives, protecting rights, and respecting human dignity."