The Phnom Penh Post

Workers offered support with Thailand migration

- Chea Sokny

THE Ministry of Interior is working to address the legitimacy of migrant Cambodian workers in Thailand, while the Ministry of Labour and Vocational Training and its partner organisati­ons offered an orientatio­n workshop to workers who are considerin­g working in the neighbouri­ng country.

Sak Setha, permanent secretary of state at the interior ministry, chaired a meeting to discuss ways and means to address the legitimacy of migrant workers in Thailand whose documents have expired or are due to soon, according to a May 16 statement by the ministry.

“All relevant institutio­ns must expand cooperatio­n with their Thai counterpar­ts to manage the situation. The two countries have signed a memorandum of understand­ing (MoU) to do so,” he said.

Setha requested that the National Committee for Counter Traffickin­g (NCCT) continue to work with Thai authoritie­s to provide undocument­ed workers with the necessary paperwork so they can legally work there.

Chou Bun Eng, ministry secretary of state and permanent vice-chair of the NCCT, said Cambodia has establishe­d two Migrant Workers Resource Centres in Banteay Meanchey province. The centres received informatio­n

track data of passing workers, notably those who had been deported from Thailand.

“We considered this work to be part of our strategy to combat human traffickin­g, especially of migrant workers,” she added.

The labour ministry, in collaborat­ion with the UN’s Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration (IOM), held a workshop on the results of a recent study of migration to Thailand, and offered orientatio­n for workers before their depart.

Executive director of the Centre for Alliance of Labour and Human Rights (CENTRAL) Moeun Tola told The Post on May 17 that regardless

of the study, some workers were still migrating to Thailand without legal documents.

Citing workers’ account, he said the process of obtaining documents was complicate­d and expensive.

“If the ministries have discussed speeding up the process to reduce its complexiti­es with the Thai side, it would be of great help to workers. They need this legitimacy to reduce the risk of being exploited,” he added.

Tola said that civil society organisati­ons and trade unions in Thailand had estimated that over two million Cambodian workers are in Thailand, over 40 per cent of them undocument­ed.

 ?? INTERIOR MINISTRY ?? Sak Setha leads a meeting on the issues facing Cambodian migrant workers to Thailand on May 16.
INTERIOR MINISTRY Sak Setha leads a meeting on the issues facing Cambodian migrant workers to Thailand on May 16.

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