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ILO
Sub-regional Office for East Asia, Bangkok: It is with great sadness that, yet again, we observe that
foreign migrant workers in search of a more prosperous future have
become victims in Thailand – and in this case they have paid with
their lives.
The
dead include more than 50 migrants from
Myanmar
, including many women and young people. The International Labour
Office is following the developments in this investigation and is
making its own enquiries into the circumstances surrounding the
tragedy, and the treatment of the survivors, through trade unions and other organizations most
involved in protecting the rights of migrant workers.
While some may characterize this as a tragic accident, or even
criminal negligence on the part of the driver of the vehicle in which
the people died, it is clear that this occurrence is an indication –
indeed a consequence – of
a much larger problem.
The Royal Thai Government is aware that Thai companies and employers
need foreign migrants to help fill vacancies in a variety of
workplaces – especially in the seafood industry, construction,
agriculture and domestic work.
The Government is actively engaging the ILO and others to reduce the
vulnerabilities of migrant workers and to deal with problems when they
arise. Still, much more needs to be done.
Despite the Government’s attempts to formalize a system of
cross-border employment agreements with its neighbours, the demand by
Thai employers for migrant workers – documented or undocumented –
is continuing and may even be accelerating. However, the formal
systems of recruitment are not working. The reasons vary
– a slow and
expensive migrant registration system, a breakdown in the sending
countries’ abilities to provide the initial documentation required
and legitimate concerns of migrants who are worried that they will not
be able to change employers, even if they suffer abuse. Within such an
environment, trafficking for labour exploitation is bound to flourish.
The ILO’s own research into trafficking-related labour exploitation
shows that many migrants, both documented and undocumented, are indeed
suffering abuses. One report has found that more than half of the Thai
employers interviewed were of the view that locking up their migrant
employees so they ‘couldn’t escape’ was appropriate. Another 75%
of migrant workers on fishing boats had no access to their legal
documents in any event – they
were held by their employers. There are continuing indications of both
forced labour and child labour involving migrants in
Thailand
.
While
Thailand
cannot be held accountable for the reasons desperate young men, women
and even children leave
Myanmar
and other neighbouring countries to search for work in
Thailand
, the Royal Thai Government is obliged to prevent the exploitation of
those migrants inside
Thailand
, regardless of the documentation they may or may not have.
That means holding employers and recruiters accountable for the
treatment of migrants – legally registered to work or otherwise –
and punishing those employers, recruiters and sub-contractors who
abuse both the system and the migrants. It means improved labour
inspection of workplaces with the dignity and rights of the migrant
worker paramount.
It
also means re-evaluating and addressing labour migration policies head on.
There is clearly a pressing need to develop a far-reaching, forward
looking labour migration policy that will benefit not just the economy
but people too – especially workers from other countries who, at the
end of the day, are doing their fair share of helping the country
grow.
The ILO is already working with the Royal Thai Government to help
respond to the abuses of migrant workers and to help develop a better
system of labour migration management, prevent trafficking and related
exploitation of migrant workers within
Thailand
. As always, we stand ready and willing to extend any further
technical support, as may be required, to help bring to an end the
exploitation of all workers – regardless of national origin.
Bill Salter
Director, Sub-regional Office for
East Asia
International Labour Organization
For
further media enquiries, contact:
English:
Allan
Dow, International Labour Office,
Bangkok
Tel: +66 (0)2 288 2057 or Mob:
+ 66 (0)89 891 5003
Thai:
Jittima
Srisuknam, International Labour Office,
Bangkok
Tel: 02 288 1739
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