Some Cambodian migrants have been deported from Thailand in locked police trucks [Abby Seiff/Al Jazeera]
Cambodia's migrants face an uncertain future
Thousands of Cambodian labourers have fled Thailand, fearing a 'crackdown' denied by Thai authorities.
Al Jazeera | 19 June 2014
Sa Keo, Thailand/Poipet City, Cambodia - Seven
hours after being crammed into a truck with scores of other arrested
Cambodian migrant workers, Rim Khim arrived outside the Sa Kaeo
immigration police station, groaning and shaking the pins and needles
out of his legs.
In
less than an hour, he was processed by police, handed a small cup of
water and packed - once again - into a caged police truck to make the
final seven-kilometre journey across the border into Cambodia.
Around
200,000 Cambodian migrant workers have returned from Thailand over the
course of just 12 days. While many say they are coming of their own
accord - fearful amid rumours of crackdowns, arrests and even killings
by an increasingly strict Thai military government - others have been
arrested in what appear to be well-coordinated raids.
"They didn't chase us, they just put us in the truck," said Khim, a 25-year-old who has spent the last four years in Thailand working on a fishing boat. "There
wasn't any violence, but they took 3,000 baht ($92) per person. They
asked our bosses to pay us, then [forced us to] pay the soldiers."
Khim
and more than 30 other Cambodian fishermen were nabbed in Hua Hin
province after soldiers raided fishing boats and restaurants in the
area. "If we stay on the boats, it's OK, but as soon as anyone climbs onto the banks, they arrested us," he said on Tuesday, adding that being forcefully expelled won't deter him from returning to Thailand.
Nom
Borai, another young fisherman outside the immigration police station,
said he and others tried to elude the authorities by running into the
forest. "When the Thai military came, we jumped from the boat and ran into the forest, but they captured us," he said.
The Thai government has vociferously denied any such policy. In a statement issued last week, Foreign Affairs Ministry spokesman Sek Wannamethee, termed the claims "groundless" and "rumours".
"No crackdown order targeting Cambodian workers had been issued," he said. The
statement added that people had returned home for one of four reasons:
fear of false rumours, calls from concerned family members, the end of
their contracts, or to help plant rice.
But for those picked up in the raids, such claims ring false. Khim, Borai, and others arriving from Hua Hin on Tuesday morning spoke of having to pay upwards of 3,000 baht ($92) in "fees" after soldiers arrested and processed them locally. "They arrested people only to take the money," said Neu Savorn, 38.
Savorn, a waitress at a Hua Hin restaurant and five others were rounded up by soldiers who later demanded 4,000 baht ($123) in fees. "When we are working, we keep the money with the boss. When we were arrested, they just took all the money from him," Savorn said.
Officials at the Sa Kaeo immigration police station refused to speak, saying they were not authorised to talk with the media.
When journalists approached migrants, police allowed interviews but stayed nearby, appearing to listen in. As a group of young men were loaded onto a police truck, an officer inside the cage shouted at them in Khmer: "Don't talk about chasing and shooting by the Thai military. Just say [it's something you heard] from one mouth to another."
From one mouth to another
The
rumour mill has played no small part in the mass exodus of migrant
workers. Calls from nervous relatives and the rapid spread among workers
of tales of Thai brutality have caused tens of thousands to surrender
to police or embark on days-long trips to the border.
I was working and I didn't hear anything about [a roundup], but our relatives called and said come home because Thailand is in turmoil. - Chak Roeun, construction worker |
Sem
Makara, the deputy chief of staff of the Poipet immigration police,
said the bulk of returnees had come under such circumstances. "Most
of them are scared that the Thai military soldiers will arrest them and
they volunteer to go back home by themselves," he said.
Chak
Roeun, a construction worker who had returned with her five-year-old
daughter in tow, said her family had urged her to return. "I
was working and I didn't hear anything about [a roundup], but our
relatives called and said come home because Thailand is in turmoil." Two older daughters and her husband intended to return next week, she said, after receiving similar pressure from relatives.
In Poipet city, stories involving military brutality are rapidly spreading. As
the last of the truckloads of workers pulled in on Monday night,
shortly before the border closed, a young man sitting on a motorbike
near the crossing drew a crowd as he angrily explained what had really
happened during a car crash the day before.
"Thai soldiers shot their tyre," he told the group. "The car wasn't overloaded - Thai cars are too high-quality."
Two
returning Cambodian migrant workers were killed in Chanburi province on
Sunday, after their car blew a tyre and flipped over. It followed a
similar accident one day earlier, which killed six people. In both
cases, the story has rapidly become one of Thai viciousness, with many
saying they had heard soldiers shot out the tyres.
"I
met four others [who were in the van]. They said the Thai soldiers shot
their tyres because they didn't stop at the checkpoint. The car then
rolled and crashed," said Phoem Phoeurth, 48, who was waiting for Thai
authorities to send through the border the body of his 44-year-old
sister, Phoem Phoeurb, and his cousin, 38-year-old Kan Chean.
A woman, sitting restlessly at a makeshift clinic, beseeched passers-by for information about her son. "Thai
soldiers arrested my son at his construction site on June 9. I don't
know what happened to him because now I can't reach him," she said.
An open end
With
some 200,000 people returning home, out of a labour force estimated at
between 200,000 and 500,000, the question has become: What next?
Cambodia
relies heavily on remittances from migrant workers in Thailand, and the
Thai economy benefits from the labour supply. Many Cambodians working
in Thailand do so simply because they cannot make enough to support
themselves and their families in their home country.
Cambodian immigrants flee Thailand |
"The
next big challenge, the next question, is that all these people have
been going to Thailand and they're supporting their family with
remittances. It's going to be a big challenge for them to reintegrate
back into the local employment labour force," said Brett Dickson, Poipet
team leader for the International Organization for Migration.
Political
analyst Pavin Chachavalpongpun of Kyoto University predicted that the
impact on both nations' economies would be "massive".
"Mostly
[it] will cause an impact on local businesses both in Thailand and in
Cambodia. Thai border economy relies much on foreign (cheap) workers. By
playing the nationalistic card, the military risks facing further
resistance from businesses in the locality," Pavin said in an email.
Indeed,
even the military government admitted as much, saying in the foreign
affairs ministry statement that "Thai authorities attach great
importance to migrant workers from neighbouring countries as they not
only help to contribute to Thailand's economy, but also because of the
close historical and friendly ties between the governments and peoples
of Thailand and those countries."
Many
of those interviewed on both sides of the border, however, said they
intended to remain in Cambodia until the political situation cooled.
Others said they would return as soon as they could get their hands on a
passport.
Amid
the chaos of thousands of returning workers, Boun Sophean and Sok Srey
Leak patiently waited with their young daughter for a Cambodian military
truck to bring them back to their home province of Kampong Chhnang. The couple had spent the past year working in a fertiliser factory making as much as 900 baht ($28) a day between them.
"Right
now, I'm just focused on having my baby," said Srey Leak, who is nine
months pregnant. "After that, if it calms down, of course we will go
back. If we stay in Cambodia, there's nothing to do."
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