The Borneo Post

Thailand cracks down on migrant workers

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BANGKOK: Thailand is cracking down on migrant workers from neighbouri­ng countries, saying they are ‘stealing jobs from Thais’, amid fears that anti-immigrant sentiment is rising as Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy stagnates.

In an operation led by the Thai labour department, police and troops on Wednesday raided a fresh produce market in Bangkok and arrested 14 people, most of them from neighbouri­ng Myanmar.

“We have received many complaints about illegal immigrants working in markets including Vietnamese and even South Asians who were stealing jobs from Thais,” Thai immigratio­n police chief Nathorn Phrosuntho­rn told Reuters.

“They should be doing the jobs that Thais don’t want to do like work as house cleaners,” he said.

Under the terms of a 2015 memorandum of understand­ing Vietnamese citizens are restricted in their employment in Thailand and can work only as manual labourers in Thailand’s fishing or constructi­on sectors.

Cambodians also have been nabbed in the raids, along with people from Myanmar and Vietnam.

More than 3 million migrants work in Thailand, the vast majority from neighbouri­ng Myanmar, according to the Internatio­nal Organisati­on for Migration.

Thailand became wealthy compared to its neighbours when its economy boasted annual growth rates of over 7 per cent in the 1980s and 1990s, drawing migrant workers from across the Greater Mekong Delta region and other parts of Asia. They mostly did jobs Thais tend to spurn, including backbreaki­ng work in the fishing and constructi­on sectors.

But, more than two years after the military government seized power and with Thailand’s economy on shaky ground, rights groups also see rising resentment against immigrants in Thailand, mirroring such sentiment elsewhere in the world.

“There seems to be a surge of national sentiment in Thai immigratio­n policy claiming migrants from Vietnam, for example, are taking jobs that are reserved for Thai nationals,” Sunai Phasuk from Human Rights Watch told Reuters.

“We haven’t seen this kind of rise in anti-immigrant sentiment for decades. This has a lot to do economic concerns.” Sanit Choklamler­t, a shop keeper in Bangkok’s Silom business district, said migrants are seen as competitor­s for some Thais.

“There are too many Myanmar people here now and they’re fighting for the same jobs as us,” he said. “We need to send some back.” Thailand’s economy is on course to grow 3.0 per cent in 2016 after expanding 2.8 per cent in 2015 and only 0.7 percent in 2014.

Nathorn said the crackdown was not driven by an antiimmigr­ant policy. “We still need migrant labour. We just want to keep some order,” he said.

The raids have targeted fresh markets, restaurant­s, supermarke­ts and shopping malls. Around 153 immigrants were rounded up between Sept. 1 and Sept. 26, according to labour department figures. Those caught face up to five years in prison, a fine of up to 3,000 baht ( US$ 100) or deportatio­n.

Migrants are often at risk of falling into the hands of human traffickin­g rings, who sell them into virtual slavery on plantation­s, timber mills and fishing boats, human rights groups say.

Thailand was removed from the bottom rung of the U State Department’s annual list of worst human traffickin­g offenders this year despite what the department described as ‘widespread forced labour’ in the country’s vital seafood industry. — Reuters

We have received many complaints about illegal immigrants working in markets including Vietnamese and even South Asians who were stealing jobs from Thais. Nathorn Phrosuntho­rn, Thai immigratio­n police chief

 ??  ?? Foreign and local tourists posing for photograph­s with park rangers as they evacuate from Sembalun near the Barujari volcano in the Gunung Rinjani National Park. — AFP photo
Foreign and local tourists posing for photograph­s with park rangers as they evacuate from Sembalun near the Barujari volcano in the Gunung Rinjani National Park. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? A migrant worker cries during a crack down on illegal migrant workers at a market in Bangkok, Thailand. — Reuters photo
A migrant worker cries during a crack down on illegal migrant workers at a market in Bangkok, Thailand. — Reuters photo

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