The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Myanmar workers in Thailand victims of a broken system

- By Phyo Hein Kyaw & Marion Thibaut

MYAWADDY, Myanmar: With only meagre belongings stuffed into backpacks and duffel bags, tens of thousands of Myanmar migrants have streamed home across the Thai border over the past two weeks.

But it is not a joyous home coming for the truckloads of men and women, who fled Thailand in fear of a new law that hardens penalties on the millions of undocument­ed migrant workers underpinni­ng its economy.

Thailand’s sudden roll-out of the labour decree, which hikes up fines on unregister­ed workers and their employers, sent a lightning bolt of panic through migrant communitie­s.

“If we were arrested, we would have to pay money to police. If this happened, all of our money would disappear,” Thu Ya, who worked in a Thai plastics factory, told AFP while preparing to cross back into Myanmar’s eastern border town of Myawaddy.

The mass exodus of migrants — estimated to be more than 60,000 — is only the latest chaos to highlight the precarious lives of migrant workers who take up difficult and dangerous jobs in Thailand’s factories and fishing boats.

Much of the work force lacks proper documentat­ion and lives in constant fear of exploitati­on from police, bosses, and trafficker­s.

And yet many Myanmar migrants scrambling across the border said these hardships still beat the prospect of dire poverty in their homeland, where jobs and good wages are difficult to come by.

“I will consider coming back in a legal way, with the full documents,” said Thu Ya, 32, who has spent much of his life in Thailand.

Myanmar’s new civilian government, which came to power last year, was expected to usher in a windfall of foreign investment into a resource-rich country that was closed off to the world during the former junta’s 50-year reign.

In a jubilant visit to Thailand in June 2016, de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi vowed to drive the economic growth that would bring her countrymen home.

But a year on the gains have fallen short of expectatio­ns and Myanmar is still years away from offering wages that rival those in Thailand.

A steep decline in foreign investment — down 28 per cent in the last quarter of 2016 — sounded alarm bells over an economy whose initial opening in 2011 was met with a rush of investor excitement.

The country’s GDP growth also fell below seven per cent for the first time in five years in 2016, clocking in at 6.5 per cent.

Having fleetingly become the fastest-growing economy in the region, Myanmar now lags behind the Philippine­s, Laos and Cambodia.

Economists blame the slump on a lack of clarity from the new government on its economic policies, as well as the ponderous progress in passing a new investment law.

“We have a problem because the ministers have no economic culture, and then the reforms are done too slowly,” said Myanmar economist Khin Maung Nyo.

The young civilian government, stacked with political novices, faces the monumental challenge of trying to unpick the junta’s devastatin­g economic legacy.

“We need to create thousands of jobs but I doubt we will be able to do it quickly,” Khin Maung Nyo added.

In the meantime, Thailand looks set to continue to be a magnet for its neighbour’s workers.

Huge sections of Thailand’s economy, especially constructi­on and food production, rely on migrants to do jobs that comparativ­ely wealthier Thais have long since eschewed.

And while the country has one of the slowest growth rates in Asia, the minimum wage of 305 baht (RM38.70) a day is more than three times the equivalent in Myanmar.

Since coming to power in 2014 Thailand’s junta has unveiled a series of campaigns to clean-up abuses in its migrant labour sector, which also attracts significan­t numbers of workers from Cambodia and Laos.

But rights groups say the drives are often short lived and ad-hoc, creating more confusion. This time was no different.

Caught off-guard by the mass exodus, Thailand’s junta ruled last week to suspend its new law for six months.

Junta chief Prayut Chan-O-Cha called for calm and reassured business owners: “Don’t panic, they will come back soon.” He is likely to be right. Silar, a Myanmar nurse working in Bangkok, went home full of hope in 2015, eager to reunite with her husband and daughter.

But she struggled to find work and is now back in the Thai capital — gripped with fear after misplacing her work permit.

“In Myanmar, there is still not enough work, especially in the countrysid­e, and wages remain very low,” she told AFP, using a pseudonym for anonymity.

“I do not know what I’m going to do.” — AFP

We have a problem because the ministers have no economic culture, and then the reforms are done too slowly.

– Khin Maung Nyo. Myanmar economist

 ??  ?? Migrant workers arriving in an official service truck from Thailand at the Myanmar immigratio­n office in Myawaddy. With only meagre belongings stuffed into backpacks and duffel bags, tens of thousands of Myanmar migrants have streamed home across the...
Migrant workers arriving in an official service truck from Thailand at the Myanmar immigratio­n office in Myawaddy. With only meagre belongings stuffed into backpacks and duffel bags, tens of thousands of Myanmar migrants have streamed home across the...
 ??  ?? Migrant workers boarding Thai and Myanmar official service trucks leaving Thailand at the Thai-Myanmar border in Mae Sot.
Migrant workers boarding Thai and Myanmar official service trucks leaving Thailand at the Thai-Myanmar border in Mae Sot.
 ??  ?? Boarding Thai and Myanmar official service trucks leaving Thailand at the Thai-Myanmar border in Mae Sot.
Boarding Thai and Myanmar official service trucks leaving Thailand at the Thai-Myanmar border in Mae Sot.
 ??  ?? Exchanging money from Thai baht to Myanmar kyat at the Myanmar immigratio­n office in Myawaddy.
Exchanging money from Thai baht to Myanmar kyat at the Myanmar immigratio­n office in Myawaddy.

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