The Mercury

Thailand in anti-slavery drive to get exports off US blacklist

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THAILAND stepped up efforts to tackle modern slavery yesterday, with a dozen industry associatio­ns signing pacts to rid their supply chains of child and forced labour as part of a government drive to get several key exports taken off a US blacklist.

The businesses pledged to publicise their policies on forced and child labour, set up complaint mechanisms and undergo audits, though some anti-traffickin­g experts cautioned that the voluntary nature of the accords could limit their effectiven­ess.

Labour Minister Suchart Chomklin said he hoped the initiative would boost Thailand’s image abroad as it seeks to earn a top tier rank in this year’s US Traffickin­g in Persons report.

“Sometimes business operators do not intend to use child labour, but children follow their parents (to work) and photos are taken, for instance, of children picking up shrimps and are seen as using child labour,” he said.

Shrimp – along with fish, sugar cane and garments – are included on the US list of Thai goods suspected of being produced using child or forced labour.

Thailand has pointed to improved efforts to stop traffickin­g in recent years, under scrutiny from Washington and following criticism of its failure to tackle abuses in the seafood and textile sectors, as well as the sex trade.

In its latest report in 2019, the US said Thailand had made a moderate advance in eliminatin­g the worst forms of child labour, but found children were still working in the garment, agricultur­al and seafood-processing sectors. About 177 000 children aged 5 to 17 work as labourers in Thailand – three-quarters in hazardous jobs, a 2018 survey by the government and the UN showed.

Some anti-traffickin­g specialist­s said they doubted the memorandum­s of understand­ing signed by businesses and the Department of Labour Protection and Welfare would lead to significan­t change because they were non-binding.

“The government should come up with a modern slavery law like in Australia, where businesses must produce a modern slavery statement,” said Papop Siamhan, a human rights lawyer.

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