The Phnom Penh Post

Migrant worker protection­s ‘lacking’

- Leonie Kijewski and Soth Koemsoeun

CAMBODIA lacks effective mechanisms to protect its citizens working both as legal and undocument­ed migrants abroad, where such workers also face insufficie­nt protection from the countries that receive them, according to two new reports published last week.

The reports come at a time of major crackdowns on undocument­ed migrants in the region. Thousands of Cambodians have returned home after Thailand passed new laws imposing strict punishment­s on undocument­ed workers and their employers, while Malaysia has arrested thousands of workers since July 1 in a campaign against undocument­ed migrants.

Mekong Migration Network’s (MMN) report Safe from the Start – The Roles of Countries of Origin in Protecting Migrants found in interviews with Cambodian migrant workers that the Kingdom needs to better regulate its recruitmen­t agencies, reduce costs and time for legal migration channels, provide better overseas assistance and establish effective complaint mechanisms. They also recommend strengthen­ing predepartu­re training.

Reiko Harima, MMN regional coordinato­r, said in an email that “the most urgent tasks for Cambodia are to improve overseas assistance, and also to negotiate with Thailand to improve conditions for migrant workers”.

“[Migrants] reported to MMN that when they have approached embassies for help, they were not given assistance,” he said. What’s more, he added, “Cambodian migrants leaving Thailand experience difficulty securing the social security benefits that they are entitled to, as there is no practical mechanism for the transfer of money.”

In a push to document migrant workers in Thailand, Cambodia’s Labour Ministry in a statement yesterday clarified the procedure: Thai employers have to register their undocument­ed Cambodian workers by August 7 at one of the 97 newly establishe­d offices in Thailand, where Cambodians workers then have to present themselves between August 8 and September 9. Until December 31, workers “must not change the employer or locations, or resign without permission”.

Ministry spokespers­on Heng Sour in a Facebook video on Sunday said the procedure benefited the workers, who would “get the salary based on the law of Thailand, get health and life insurance during the work and get the National Social Security from the Thai government”.

But Moeun Tola, director of labour rights group Central, yesterday said that this was insufficie­nt. “It’s not effective enough yet, since some employers prefer hiring undocument­ed workers instead of documented ones,” he said.

However, Cambodia doesn’t bear sole responsibi­lity for protecting its migrants, according to a report titled Towards a Comprehens­ive National Policy on Labour Migration for Malaysia. The Migrant Work- ers Right to Redress Coalition expressed concern regarding recruitmen­t processes – which they say have to be formalised and regulated better – and a number of other issues facing migrant workers, including Cambodians, in Malaysia.

“[There] is no comprehens­ive national policy on labour migration, to ensure . . . that abuses against workers, social dislocatio­n, profiteeri­ng, human traffickin­g and modern day slavery are rooted out and stopped,” it reads.

Adrian Pereira, a coordinato­r for the North-South Initiative who was involved in the drafting of the paper, said in a message that the most urgent concern was that agreements between Cambodia and Malaysia and workers’ contracts should “guarantee basic rights of workers at all stages of recruitmen­t to employment to return”. “Only when rights [are] in black and white can we ensure [they are] materialis­ed and not based on ‘good will’ of any party.”

These rights include decent salaries, working hours, vacation days and more, he said.

Tan Heang-Lee, communicat­ions’ officer at Women’s Aid Organisati­on Malaysia, said that women were particular­ly vulnerable. “There must be greater recognitio­n of domestic work as work, and of domestic workers as employees,” she said. “Migrant domestic workers are excluded from many of the protection­s and provisions of the Employment Act.”

 ?? SAHIBA CHAWDHARY ?? Cambodian migrant workers who were deported by Thai authoritie­s are processed at the Poipet Transit Centre earlier this month in Banteay Meanchey province.
SAHIBA CHAWDHARY Cambodian migrant workers who were deported by Thai authoritie­s are processed at the Poipet Transit Centre earlier this month in Banteay Meanchey province.
 ?? SUPPLIED ?? A CMAC official unearths one of the two unexploded Mk 82 bombs on Sunday in Kandal province.
SUPPLIED A CMAC official unearths one of the two unexploded Mk 82 bombs on Sunday in Kandal province.

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