The Phnom Penh Post

Ministry in migrant push

- Leonie Kijewski and Yon Sineat

THE Cambodian Labour Ministry is stepping up its efforts to legalise undocument­ed migrants in Thailand, and is considerin­g using a similar model in Malaysia.

The government aims to legalise about 160,000 Cambodians in Thailand in response to a new law passed that imposes strict punishment­s on undocument­ed migrant workers and their employers.

“A committee sent four mobile working groups to about 200 factories,” Labour Minister Ith Sam Heng said, adding that fees were about $30 for registrati­on and about $70 for passports.

Yet, according to a Thai da- tabase, almost 7,700 undocument­ed Cambodians will have to return to the Kingdom, having failed interviews to become documented after registerin­g with the Employment Department.

While yesterday was the last official day for interviews, thousands of Cambodian, Myanmar and Lao nationals still had not been interviewe­d as of yesterday evening. However, an Employment Department official, speaking anonymousl­y as he was not allowed to speak to the press, said the government “unofficial­ly” expected the screening to continue until mid-September.

Sam Heng, meanwhile, said yesterday that the process could serve as an example. “If the legalisati­on campaign for migrant workers is successful in Thailand, the Cambodian Government is thinking to process the legalisati­on of Cambodian migrant workers in Malaysia as well,” he said.

But Dy The Hoya, of labour rights group Central, remained sceptical. “Some workers didn’t get any informatio­n,” he said, adding that some often paid about $120 to $150 for someone to help them with the complicate­d applicatio­n process.

Adrian Pereira, a coordinato­r for North-South Initiative in Malaysia, said undertakin­g a similar programme would prove difficult in Malaysia, as migrant workers who entered the country undocument­ed by law could not become legalised under current rules.

 ?? HRDF THAILAND ?? Migrant workers wait to be processed at a registrati­on centre in Chiang Mai, Thailand last month.
HRDF THAILAND Migrant workers wait to be processed at a registrati­on centre in Chiang Mai, Thailand last month.

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