At border, gov’t bill mounts
The financial burden inflicted by hundreds of thousands of
returning Cambodian migrant workers has already reached $5 million in
government-mobilised emergency services alone, according to official
estimates.
In less than two weeks, nearly 200,000 mostly undocumented Cambodian
migrants have spilled through the Thai-Cambodia border, fleeing what
they fear is a military-led crackdown on Thailand’s irregular labour
force.
The government has already spent roughly $5 million providing the
returned workers food, water, medical supplies and free transportation
back to their home provinces, Deputy Prime Minister Ke Kim Yan said
during a visit yesterday to the Poipet international checkpoint, which
has seen the vast majority of the exodus.
“The expenditure does not include the 2,000 service providers,” he
said. Yan tried to add a positive note to his speech yesterday, telling
the workers that they arrived at a good time when some “half a million
workers” are needed in Cambodia.
“Please think about taking local work opportunities, which have no risks and are near your homes and in your country,” he said.
On Tuesday, the Ministry of Interior sent out a directive to all
ministry officials advising them to take extra precautions with
returning elderly women, children and the sick, who aid workers on the
border said often get pushed aside in lines for the buses by men eager
to return home.
In the statement, Dol Koeun, secretary of state at the ministry, also
said border patrols need to be extra cautious in ensuring that no
workers are coming or going cross the border illegally.
Meanwhile, the opposition party yesterday used the border situation
as an opportunity to criticise the ruling Cambodian People’s Party for
not installing a long-term reintegration policy.
“This government does not have a plan for all these people because
the political platform of the Cambodian People’s Party does not have any
clear job creation platform,” said Kem Sokha, acting president of the
CNRP.
While offering no solution himself to the shock of excess labour,
Sokha asked all opposition lawmakers to join him on a humanitarian trip
to the border on Friday.
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