The Phnom Penh Post

Unofficial crossings closed

- Yon Sineat and Leonie Kijewski

THE Cambodian government closed all unofficial border checkpoint­s in Banteay Meanchey and Battambang in an apparent response to Thailand’s laws imposing stricter punishment­s on migrant workers.

Phlon Dara, Banteay Meanchey provincial military chief, yesterday said that his province had closed 43 checkpoint­s on Saturday for an indefinite time period, following an order by the Interior Ministry on Friday.

“Because Thailand has a new law to crack down on illegal migrant workers, they have to shut down the small checkpoint­s to stop them from illegally migrating to Thailand,” he said.

Thailand recently passed a law imposing hefty fines on irregular migrant workers, their brokers, and their employers. Migrants can also face imprisonme­nt. After a backlash by both employers and migrant advocates, the Thai government temporaril­y suspended the implementa­tion.

“There are more than 500 people who tried to go to Thailand . . . but we stopped them,” Dara said, adding that the main internatio­nal checkpoint­s remained active.

Sar Thet, Battambang provincial police chief, said they had closed “20 to 30 small illegal checkpoint­s”.

Migration researcher Laurie Parsons in an email yesterday called the move “political showmanshi­p”. Closing the border, he said, “is probably an effort to demonstrat­e equal commitment to cracking down on illegal border activity; security theatre, if you like”.

The closures, he said, could harm people’s incomes, but did little to quell smuggling and irregular migration.

“Certainly, they form key arteries of everyday commerce, so it will put significan­t pressure on the livelihood­s of ordinary people on both sides of the border,” he said.

He said Cambodia’s reaction should be seen in the broader context of border security. He added that the Thai and Cambodian government­s held a summit last December “about gaining control of the border” in response to smuggling and border shootings. “It is all interconne­cted,” he said.

And while Cambodia restricted migration to Thailand, hundreds of migrants continued returning to Cambodia – both voluntaril­y and involuntar­ily – in response to the new law.

According to Poipet police officer Sin Namyieng, almost 400 workers crossed back into Cambodia as of yesterday afternoon, and 736 returned on Sunday. The Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration says the typical number of Cambodians returning in a given day is between 100 and 200.

IOM spokesman Troy Dooley said many migrants took deportatio­ns as an opportunit­y to get home. “For one, they decided to return because they don’t have the documents, or two, their em- ployers asked them to return.”

Clarifying uncertaint­ies about the suspension of the royal decree, Kamontit Bueatsong, an official at Thailand’s Employment Ministry, said the implementa­tion would be delayed for 120 days starting retroactiv­ely on June 23.

She added that the stricter punishment­s laid out in the decree would not come into effect, but that the decree itself did not deal with deportatio­ns.

“After 120 days we will use the new law, until then we will only deport them,” she said.

Nonetheles­s, Khun Tharo, project coordinato­r of Building Workers Internatio­nal, said many irregular Cambodian migrants in the Thai constructi­on industry were “really concerned” about the decree.

“They try to escape . . . and don’t even talk to us [unionists], as they’re worried the Thai police can fine them,” he said.

Migrant worker Khun Sany said yesterday that she left because of the decree, and will obtain a passport in Phnom Penh. She said she wanted to return to Thailand on Monday.

“I have a week to get the legal document, as my employer let me come back to make legal documents,” she said.

“I previously decided to work undocument­ed because I have to spend from $600 to $700 to be legal,” she said, and added that she had to pay more for an expedited passport because of her time constraint­s.

 ?? MARYANN BYLANDER ?? Cambodian migrant workers wait at Poipet’s immigratio­n office on Friday, after trucks full of workers were deported by Thai authoritie­s back to the Kingdom.
MARYANN BYLANDER Cambodian migrant workers wait at Poipet’s immigratio­n office on Friday, after trucks full of workers were deported by Thai authoritie­s back to the Kingdom.

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