Prime Minister
Hun Sen yesterday had sharp words for neighbouring Thailand, criticising
the junta-led country for abusing the rights of Cambodian workers in
what he called the largest-ever repatriation effort seen by the Kingdom.Speaking at an event in the capital attended by the Thai ambassador,
the premier said it was “a violation” to return more than 250,000
migrant workers this month without prior notification, and appealed to
the junta to release 13 Cambodians arrested for allegedly using fake
visas.“I would like to ask [coup leader] General Prayuth Chan-ocha to drop
all charges against them,” he said, adding that the detained workers are
innocent of any wrongdoing, but are themselves victims of a scam after
they paid for legal visas only to receive fake documents instead.
“The workers cannot read Thai, so they didn’t know if the visa was
fake or not,” he added, ahead of a meeting today between high-ranking
officials from the two governments on the Thai side of the border.The prime minister had, until yesterday, stayed quiet regarding the
sudden, mass exodus of Cambodian workers from Thailand. He revealed,
however, that he has been communicating with General Prayuth through
letters, and was informed earlier this month that Thailand was enforcing
migrant-worker policies to curb human trafficking, though there was “no
intention to use force or to expel the migrants”.The premier also tried to lend a positive note to the situation,
calling it an opportunity to turn “illegal status” into more secure
“legal work overseas”.
Last week, the Ministry of Labour
and Vocational Training announced that it would provide workers and
students with $4 passports, and also recently banned recruitment
agencies from charging workers any commission fee. The new,
yet-to-be-implemented, legalisation process will cost $49 and involve a
two-and-a-half-month waiting period as all documents are procured.
“It’s a good measure in theory, but it’s not going to work,” said political analyst Kem Ley. “It doesn’t take into account
indirect costs or opportunity costs, like to travel [to one of two
passport offices in the country] and housing costs while the workers
wait, during which they will be losing income by not working.”Hun Sen said yesterday that he hopes to resolve such issues by
opening a passport office in every province, though did not elaborate on
how or when that could be accomplished.
The opposition denigrated the government’s efforts however, faulting the head of state for talking loudly but not talking more concrete steps to assist the workers, especially the 13 who could face trial in Thailand.“By just announcing his position, he’s not actually doing anything,”
opposition lawmaker Son Chhay said yesterday. “As the leader of the
country, the prime minister is responsible for getting [the jailed
workers] home.”
Chhay added that there are “many diplomatic channels available”,
recalling that when Thailand has taken issue with Cambodia in the past,
they closed the border.Hun Sen showed no interest
in retaliating however, and both countries have maintained they are
cooperating over the bilateral issue. Senior officials from both
governments are set to meet today for a press conference on the Thai
side of the Poipet-Aranyaprathet border, and the prime minister said he
expects an envoy from Thailand to visit Phnom Penh on July 1.Addressing the workers yesterday, Hun Sen told them that they do not have to go abroad for jobs.“Although wages here are lower than what you earn in Thailand, if you
compare to fees you spend to get illegally to Thailand, it is not so
much less,” he said, adding that “working in our country is safer”.
On Wednesday, the National Employment Agency
put out a statement advertising 16,146 vacant jobs largely in the
garment sector, aiming to prove the government could in fact employ the
recently returned migrant workers.“There are probably enough jobs if you include all the availability
in the agriculture and construction sectors,” said Hong Choeun, director
general of the agency.
Choeun also refuted yesterday the workers’ claims that they make too little in Cambodia to afford to live.“Not all unskilled Cambodian workers go to Thailand, so they must
earn enough,” he said. “Thailand was like a gold rush of people, because
they heard they could make more money, but now the gold rush is over.”
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