The Phnom Penh Post

Asean states agree to protect migrant rights

- Leonie Kijewski

ASEAN member states have signed an agreement on the protection and promotion of the rights of migrant workers – more than a decade after originally pledging to do so.

The agreement includes fair pay protection­s and will require the 10 member states to organise predepartu­re training for all migrant workers.

It also requires states that send migrant workers abroad to “set reasonable, transparen­t, and standardiz­ed fees for passport issuance”, and to “take necessary actions to prohibit overchargi­ng of placement or recruitmen­t fees”.

While Cambodia in principle has set passport prices, many migrant workers have complained about exorbitant fees when applying for travel documents with agencies.

The Asean member states agreed in 2007 to draft protection­s for workers and have been criticised over the last decade for failing to do so.

If the guidelines are implemente­d, millions of Cambodian workers – mostly in Thailand, Malaysia and South Korea – stand to benefit.

Ministry of Labour spokesman Heng Sour welcomed the new framework.

“We do hope that this tool will be able to protect all the migrant workers across Asean,” he said. “Each member state needs to take into account this protocol into their own laws, in order to ensure that domestic law of each member state complies with the principle of the Asean migration protection protocol.”

However, Mom Sokchar, programme manager at Legal Support for Children and Women, expressed concern by email that the agreement might lack teeth. “The implementa­tion will still be subject to the respective laws of ASEAN Members States . . . There is a need to push for . . . [member states] to come up with a clear [commitment] to implement this,” he said.

He also criticised the fact that the agreement excluded undocument­ed workers from protection, unless they became undocument­ed “through no fault of their own”. Experts estimate that there are hundreds of thousands of undocument­ed Cambodian migrant workers in Thailand alone.

Adrian Pereira, coordinato­r of the North-South Initiative in Malaysia, which works with migrants, said the agreement was “a start” but was too vague and not inclusive enough.

However, he said some concrete rights were given to workers, such as the right to join unions and associatio­ns.

 ?? FACEBOOK ?? Asean leaders pose for a photograph after signing the Asean Consensus on the Protection and Promotion of the Rights of Workers on Tuesday in Manila.
FACEBOOK Asean leaders pose for a photograph after signing the Asean Consensus on the Protection and Promotion of the Rights of Workers on Tuesday in Manila.

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