Bangkok Post

Rights must be upheld when Thai firms go abroad

- RINA CHANDRAN SON REUTERS FOUNDATION THOM-

Thailand’s businesses and its government must do more to protect the rights of vulnerable people abroad, analysts and activists said, after a landmark case filed by Cambodian farmers in a Bangkok court against a Thai sugar firm.

It is the first time plaintiffs from another country have filed a class-action lawsuit against a Thai company in a Thai court over its operations outside Thailand.

The two plaintiffs represent about 3,000 people who say they were forcibly removed from their homes and land in five villages in Oddar Meanchey province in Cambodia’s northwest, to make way for a Mitr Pohl sugarcane plantation between 2008 and 2009.

As cross-border investment­s in the region increase to tap resources, markets and cheaper labour, cases such as these will become more common because of difference­s in legislatio­n and inadequate protection­s for workers and residents, experts said.

“This is about ensuring that Thai companies respect human rights in the countries they operate in, and holding them accountabl­e for violations,” said Sor Rattanaman­ee Polkla at the Community Resource Centre, which is representi­ng the plaintiffs.

“There is no Thai law against irresponsi­ble outbound investment, and countries like Laos, Cambodia and Myanmar do not have proper frameworks for environmen­tal and social impact assessment­s. We had no choice but to file a suit,” she said.

The plaintiffs are asking for their land to be returned and 4 million baht in total compensati­on, she said.

Mitr Phol, the Thai sugar producer, said it had received temporary concession­s in compliance with all local and national laws, and had assurances from the Cambodian government that the areas had been processed “legally and transparen­tly”.

Mitr Phol said it had withdrawn from the project in 2014, and that it had recommende­d that the Cambodian government return the land to the “affected communitie­s”.

The case, filed last month, is set to begin on June 11.

Cambodia awarded large economic land concession­s to foreign companies — mainly from China, Vietnam, South Korea and Thailand — to operate mines, power plants and farms in order to spur economic growth and alleviate poverty.

Such deals, which covered more than a tenth of the country’s surface area by 2012, have displaced more than 770,000 people since 2000, rights lawyers say.

Following protests and pressure from rights groups, Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen announced a moratorium on new concession­s in 2012, and promised to review old ones.

But activists say the reviews did not lead to significan­t changes, and that even when concession­s were cancelled, the land was often retained by the government.

In the case of Mitr Phol, the villagers first filed a complaint with the Bonsucro sugarcane sustainabi­lity initiative, and then the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) of Thailand, a government agency.

After a two-year investigat­ion, the NHRC said rights violations had occurred, and Mitr Phol was directly responsibl­e. It asked Mitr Phol to pay compensati­on in line with the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights.

But the NHRC’s powers are limited, Ms Sor said, and the Cambodian farmers did not get compensati­on or their land back.

“The NHRC can issue recommenda­tions, but these are not binding. Filing cases is an option, but it is always a challenge to go through the judicial system,” Angkhana Neelapaiji­t, a member of the NHRC, said.

The NHRC has received more than a dozen complaints about Thai overseas investment­s related to their impact on the environmen­t and people, she said.

In response to the NHRC’s recommenda­tions, the cabinet issued resolution­s in 2016 and 2017, calling for Thai investors to respect and protect the rights of local people, and to prevent adverse impacts on the environmen­t and to livelihood­s.

Last year, Prime Minister Prayuth Chanocha said the government intended to implement the UN guiding principles in a policy plan being drafted in consultati­on with rights groups.

But the region has proven to be a “laggard” in adopting an enforceabl­e regional human rights system, said David Pred, co-founder of advocacy group Inclusive Developmen­t Internatio­nal.

“We shouldn’t hold our breath waiting for government­s to adopt one. But that need not stop people from pursuing justice for business-related human rights violations in the national courts of the countries where the companies are domiciled.”

Thai outbound investment in 2017 totalled about $20 billion, according to the country’s investment board, much of it going to Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam.

But investors are backing projects “with little regulation and often with disregard for the human and environmen­tal rights impacts”, according to a report from the UN Working Group on Business and Human Rights published in November.

“Negative impacts commonly include destructio­n of livelihood­s, land grabs and forced eviction,” it said.

Thai investors must apply the highest internatio­nal standards and offer remedy for abuses, said Surya Deva, a member of the UN working group, which concluded a 10-day visit to Thailand last week.

“If Thai companies are benefiting from these investment­s, and outsourcin­g negative human rights impacts, it is critical that they also provide opportunit­ies for any victims to file cases in Thailand if needed,” he said.

“It is a complicate­d process, but that option should be available,” he said.

Reporting by Rina Chandran @rinachandr­an. Editing by Robert Carmichael. The Thomson Reuters Foundation is the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitari­an news, women’s rights, traffickin­g, property rights, climate change and resilience. Visit news.trust.org to see more stories.

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