The Phnom Penh Post

Migrants to Korea to see testing shake-up

- Touch Sokha

CAMBODIANS who work in South Korea will no longer have access to an expedited procedure to go back to South Korea once their contracts expire and they have to return to Cambodia, according to an announceme­nt from the Ministry of Labour on Saturday.

Human Resources Developmen­t Service of Korea (HRD-Korea) has temporaril­y suspended a special Korean language test for migrant workers from 15 countries to reduce the number of re-entries, the announceme­nt said.

Before entering South Korea, workers have to take a language test. The special test for those with work experience in South Korea was held four times a year, whereas the general test is held only once a year, according to the test’s website. Now, rather than requalifyi­ng with the faster special test, applicants seeking to return to Korea must wait and retake the general test.

According to Ministry of Labour spokesman Heng Sour, South Korean law allows migrant workers to stay in the country for a maximum of four years and 10 months, after which they have to return to Cambodia and re-apply.

Sour said re-entering workers would still have priority. “Employers . . . mostly select the experience­d ones,” he said.

The general test is also more competitiv­e, with 54,000 applicants last year for about 10,000 spots. Meanwhile, the pass rate for the special test was about twice as high, with a total of about 1,500 applicants passing out of a total of about 4,000 applicants, according to Sour and informatio­n on the website.

Kong Sary, a Cambodian worker whose contract is nearly up, said the new scheme would have other consequenc­es.

For the general test, he said, HRD-Korea is responsibl­e for sending names of applicants to potential employers, making it an almost random selection.

Workers who had passed the special test, on the other hand, could immediatel­y restart their employment with their previous employers if they had an agreement – an option that will no longer be available.

“At first, I almost couldn’t believe the news,” he said.

Neither the South Korean Embassy in Cambodia nor the Cambodian Embassy in South Korea could be reached yesterday.

In 2016, Cambodia sent some 9,400 workers to South Korea.

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