Fearful of a crackdown on undocumented workers, thousands of
Cambodian migrants clutching children and towing their possessions in
sacks and plastic bags, milled into a train station.
They crammed inside in an
orderly fashion-- mostly nervous and solemn -- as they waited for the
train that will take them back to Cambodia."They told me the Thai
military would arrest us, and they would shoot," said Bo Sin, a
Cambodian construction worker who was among those departing from the
Thai border town of Aranyaprathet.
When asked where he got this information, Bo Sin replied, "It could be a rumor, people are passing along this information."Many of the Cambodian
workers echoed Bo Sin's fears. They say they're leaving because of talk
of arrest and persecution -- unsubstantiated allegations that the Thai
junta vehemently denies.But it has not stemmed
the tide of Cambodian workers heading to the borders. About 140,000
migrant workers have fled Thailand causing bottleneck congestion at the
border, said Joe Lowry, spokesman for the International Organization for
Migration.
"I feel really afraid,
and my mother also called me to return home," said Ban Sue, a Cambodian
cook who had worked at a Bangkok restaurant.Thailand has been under
the control of the military since a coup in late May. Although tackling
illegal migration has been one of the junta's priorities, unease over
the issue and the sudden change in government may have fueled the
migrant workers' concerns.
Thai officials say there
is no crackdown on undocumented workers and that it has been spurred by
"groundless news reports based on rumors."Neither the junta nor
local authorities have issued orders concerning migrant workers, said
Sek Wannamethee, spokesman of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of
Thailand in a press release.
"The rumor which was
spread by unknown sources has caused panic among both Cambodian workers
as well as Thai employers," he said. "Consequently, a number of
Cambodian illegal workers have reported themselves to the Thai
authorities to be repatriated voluntarily to Cambodia."
There has been no use of force or killings, Sek Wannamethee said.It remains unclear where talk of a clampdown originated.The International
Organization of Migration, an intergovernmental group, estimates there
are 150,000 Cambodian undocumented migrants in Thailand with the
majority of them working in construction or agriculture.
Thailand is believed to
have about two million documented foreign migrant workers from countries
including Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos who work in low-paying jobs that
Thais are unwilling to do, according to a news service for the U.N. Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Foreign workers are often vulnerable to police harassment and exploitation, advocates say.
"Many of these people
are severely economically disadvantaged and have spent all their
savings, if they had any, to get this far," said Brett Dickson, IOM's
team leader in Poi Pet, Cambodia, in a news release.In recent decades,
relations between Cambodia and Thailand have been dogged by border
issues, tensions over an area surrounding the ancient Preah Vihear
temple, and the 2003 burning of the Thai embassy in Phnom Penh by
rioters.
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