June 23, 2014
With Thailand and Cambodia both feeling the pinch from the sudden
exodus of more than 200,000 Cambodian workers out of Thailand, the two
countries are now working together to try and get them back to their old
jobs legally, as fast as possible.
Some 225,000 Cambodians, mostly undocumented, have fled their jobs in
Thailand in the past two weeks amid widespread rumors of a crackdown on
illegal labor by the Thai Army, which has been ruling the country with
an ever-tighter grip since overthrowing the government in Bangkok last
month.
Thai businesses have already started to complain of the costly dent
that the sudden departures have had on farms, construction sites and
seafood factories across the east of the country. In Cambodia, the
government is scrambling to find the returnees new jobs and new skills
at ill-equipped training centers.
Eager to get them back to Thailand, Prime Minister Hun Sen has signed
an order slashing the price of passports for migrant workers from $124
to $4 and promising to have applications processed within 20 days.
On Friday, Labor Minister Ith Sam Heng laid out yet more steps
Cambodia and Thailand will be taking together to cut down on the time
and hassle of getting a work license.
Beginning next month, he said, Thai and Cambodian officials would be
working together at three one-stop offices—one each at international
checkpoints in Banteay Meanchey, Koh Kong and Pailin provinces—to match
workers with Thai employers and issue them the necessary licenses and
permits.
“The one-window checkpoints will provide official services from both
governments,” Mr. Sam Heng said. “That means Thailand will give us
information on which firms in Thailand can use workers from Cambodia
legally, so the people who go to work there won’t be worried or scared
that they will be mistreated or kicked out.
“Second, the Ministry of Labor will issue the work license to work
abroad. With this license, Thailand will issue a work permit for those
workers to stay in Thailand and with a company legally. The work will be
legal and safe.”
The minister did not say exactly when in July the one-stop service
would be up and running or whether the government would drop the cost of
a work license, another reason many Cambodians who head to Thailand for
work often choose illegal routes.
Banteay Meanchey Governor Kousoum Saroeuth said Sunday that he heard
from border officials that the Thai government was also cutting the fee
for a work license from the current 20,000 baht (about $616) to 2,000
baht (around $61.60).
“Now I heard that they [migrant workers] will only need 2,000 baht
for a work license to work in Thailand for six months,” he said.
With his province alone having to absorb some 27,000 of the new
returnees, Mr. Saroeuth was hopeful that the substantial drop in fees
would get many of them back to Thailand soon—and legally.
In Kompong Thom province, So An, 11 of whose children, grandchildren
and other family members migrated to Thailand seeking work, welcomed the
fee cuts, but expressed concern that hidden charges and bribes would
still drive prices above the official rate.
“I am worried that they’ll ask for more than what is set. They always
say this and that to ask for more money,” she said. “They say $4, but
in reality it’s going to be more.”
Ms. An’s daughter On Chhay Eng, who fled Thailand last week fearing arrest, said she was eager to head back at the first chance.
Working construction jobs in Phnom Penh, she said, she could barely
earn enough to cover her own expenses. In Thailand, she and her husband
were managing to send home over $150 a month, she said.
“I could manage to save some money to send back home for my kids,”
she said. “I want to go back to work there. In Cambodia I can’t earn
money.”
Along the border, meanwhile, officials on Sunday said daily crossings
continued to fall substantially over the weekend from their peak a week
ago.
At the Poipet international checkpoint in Banteay Meanchey last
weekend, officials said more than 40,000 Cambodians had poured out of
Thailand in a single day.
On Sunday, Sem Makara, the checkpoint’s deputy chief of staff for
immigration police, said fewer than 7,000 Cambodians came through on
Saturday and just under 2,000 had crossed Sunday, as of 3:40 p.m.
According to the government’s official count, at least eight
Cambodians have died in traffic accidents while fleeing Thailand or
drowned while trying to evade arrest. Accounts from NGOs and witnesses
put the number at 10.
The government says 13 Cambodians were also arrested in Thailand last
week for allegedly having their work papers endorsed by fake stamps. On
Friday, Foreign Affairs Ministry spokesman Koy Kuong said the 13 were
to be sent to court and would be provided with lawyers.
Mr. Kuong could not be reached for comment Sunday. Thailand’s
ambassador to Cambodia, Pakdi Touchayoot, said he had received no
official information about either the court case or the Thai junta’s
efforts to bring the migrant workers who fled the country back legally.
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