Some 1,000 Cambodian workers who failed to meet the deadline to legalize their work documents in Thailand have been deported since July 1, said officials at the Poipet border at Banteay Meanchey province.
Provincial Labour Department director Ros
Sarom said officials had issued legal documents to most Cambodians
working in Thailand before July.
“The word undocumented or illegal worker does not exist anymore. For
example, those who remain illegally are workers brought into Thailand by
agents, if they are arrested each worker could face a fine of up to
800,000 riel and they will be deported.
“Undocumented workers will face stern action from the Thai government
and Thailand has clearly announced that all Khmer and Vietnamese
workers must be documented in order to work in the country. If
undocumented workers are arrested, we cannot help them,” he said.
Pi Somnok, deputy human trafficking officer of the Anti-Human
Trafficking Office of the provincial police, said the number of
Cambodian returnees fluctuates – ranging from 20 workers to 100 workers a
day.
“Migrant workers return home to obtain legal documents so they can go
back to Thailand to work. There are cases where (Cambodian) workers are
arrested by Thai officials and deported, and sometimes they
(Cambodians) approach Thai officials to send them home,” said Somnok.
Last year, the Thai government issued an order to all migrant workers
to obtain legal documents by June 30, so that they can work legally in
the Kingdom. This was part of the government’s effort to weed out
illegal workers.
Source - TheNation