Bangkok Post

Migrants who sign up can stay on 2 years

Report in or face legal action, govt says

- PENCHAN CHAROENSUT­TIPAN

The cabinet has endorsed guidelines for the management of migrant workers, agreeing to allow those who complete the nationalit­y verificati­on process by this month to work for another two years after their work permits expire in March next year.

Deputy government spokesman Sansern Kaewkamner­d said workers who cannot complete the verificati­on process this month must report to authoritie­s during April 1-June 30 or face legal action and deportatio­n.

Once they register with the authoritie­s, the workers will be issued with a one-year work permit that is valid until March 31 next year. If their verificati­on process is completed in this period, they will be allowed to stay for another two years after March next year.

Maj Gen Sansern said workers who fail to report by the deadline will be arrested and deported.

He added that children of migrant workers aged under 15 are also required to report to authoritie­s for permits to stay in the country by June 30 or face deportatio­n.

Maj Gen Sansern said the Interior Ministry has been ordered to act as a core agency in setting up one-stop service centres to streamline the process of migrant worker registrati­on. The centres will open on April 1.

On the problem of labour shortages in the fishing industry, Maj Gen Sansern said the cabinet has also agreed to allow the registrati­on of Cambodian, Lao and Myanmar workers to work in the fishing industry.

He said employers are required to submit their applicatio­ns and take their workers to register at service centres in coastal provinces during April 1-June 30. Once registered the workers will be issued work permits that are valid until March 31 next year.

He said migrant workers in the fishing industry are also required to enter the nationalit­y verificati­on process. Once the process is complete they will be allowed to work for another two years.

To address the labour shortage in the fishing industry over the longer term, the National Legislativ­e Assembly has proposed a seven-step plan for the Labour Ministry to consider.

The proposals include the registrati­on of employers and their demands for labour, imports of migrant workers through legal brokers, and monitoring work conditions on fishing trawlers.

Maj Gen Sansern said Thailand will seek to revise memorandum­s of understand­ings (MoUs) on labour co-operation signed with Myanmar, Laos and Cambodia to allow migrant workers who have worked in Thailand for four years to return home for up to 30 days before they can return to Thailand and resume work.

Under the current MoUs, the workers are required to return to their home countries after having worked in Thailand for four years and they must then wait at least three years before re-applying to work in Thailand again.

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