June 21, 2014
Thai authorities have arrested and are preparing to try 13
Cambodian migrant workers who were allegedly caught with fake stamps on
their work papers as they tried to return home, Foreign Ministry
spokesman Koy Kuong confirmed on Friday.
The government also announced a plan to subsidize the cost of
passports for would-be migrant workers and students, meaning the
documents will now cost only $4 instead of the usual $124.
The arrested workers are just some of more than 200,000
Cambodians—many of them undocumented or illegal laborers—who have fled
Thailand since a military junta came to power last month, sparking fears
of violence and arrests. To date, at least 225,000 workers have crossed
back into Cambodia, according to officials.
“Thirty-eight migrant workers were arrested in Thailand’s Sa Kaeo
province last week,” Mr. Kuong said by telephone on Friday morning,
before later amending the figure to 13, based on new information. He
said the group had used authentic passports.
“None of them knew their working visas were fake, because they did not go to renew their passports by themselves,” he said.
“They asked a ringleader to renew their working visas, so we need to
find the ringleader, but we do not know yet whether he is a Cambodian or
Thai national. I heard that the Thai authorities are preparing to send
them to the court,” he said, adding that Cambodian officials in Thailand
are trying to find a lawyer to represent the group.
In December 2012, Thai authorities began issuing identity cards to
Cambodian workers who lacked proper documentation as a way of affording
them legal status to work in Thailand. Two months later, the Cambodian
Embassy in Bangkok said it would issue passports for $74 instead of the
$124 people were paying for them in Phnom Penh.
Still, the Foreign Ministry estimates that of the estimated 400,000
Cambodian migrant workers in Thailand, only about 90,000 have the
necessary documentation.
In a sub-decree signed by Prime Minister Hun Sen and released by the
Council of Ministers on Friday, another solution was presented. The
government will now only charge $4 for passports for use by migrant
workers and students awarded scholarships, and the documents will be
ready 20 days after they are applied for.
“Having granted ordinary passports for migrant workers who must go to
work abroad legally, the tax will be the state’s burden, but the
migrant workers must pay $4 for the cost of…photographs,” Article 1 of
the sub-decree says.
Tith Sothea, spokesman for the Press and Quick Reaction Unit, said
the decision had been made in an effort to “reduce the burden” on
workers and students who want to go abroad.
According to Interior Minister Sar Kheng, at least eight Cambodians
have been killed and 19 injured in traffic accidents while fleeing
possible unrest, and although the Thai authorities have denied a policy
exists to kick out illegal migrant workers, returning Cambodians have
spoken of raids, extortion, arrests, threats and shootings.
In a statement released Friday to coincide with a meeting held to
discuss the unfolding situation at the border, rights group Adhoc said
it understands that the Thai authorities have the right to repatriate
undocumented workers.
“However, the Thai junta should have done so humanely and with
respect to the inherent human dignity of Cambodian people,” Adhoc said.
“The junta should have prepared and made plans for the repatriation
of Cambodians, announcing such a move in a timely manner and preparing
for their repatriation properly, instead of packing them into trucks
like animals. The Thai junta should have coordinated with the Cambodian
government to achieve this.”
At the meeting, a recently returned illegal migrant worker, who
declined to give his name for fear of retribution, said he worked in
Thailand as a construction worker for a year, but fled after a shooting
incident.
“On June 10, in the morning, I heard the sound of three
gunshots—about 20 minutes later, some workers came to the work site and
told us that three Cambodians had been shot,” he said.
Human Rights Watch (HRW) on Friday called on the Thai junta to
“urgently improve human rights protections of migrant workers to end
their mass flight from the country.”
“More than 200,000 Cambodian workers have returned to Cambodia,
according to the International Organization for Migration and Cambodian
police,” the HRW statement says.
“At least eight fleeing migrants have died in traffic accidents on
Thai roads, and many of those who crossed the border into Cambodia had
been in squalid and unhealthy conditions before they were able to move
to other parts of the country.”
Pakdi Touchayoot, Thailand’s ambassador to Cambodia, could not be reached for comment
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