After the exodus, suffering in the village
In some villages near the Thai border, over half the
residents have migrated for work. For those left behind, it’s getting
harder and harder to cope
Lao Roun isn’t sure when she’ll see her husband again.
Two months ago, he left their home and crossed over the border into
Thailand to try to find work on a construction site. But only three days
after his arrival, he was arrested for trying to work without the
correct documentation, and has been doing time in a Thai prison ever
since.
In the small village of Moung Thbon, which sits at the intersection
of western Siem Reap and Banteay Meanchey provinces, 100 kilometres from
the Thai border, Ruon is now responsible for taking care of her mother,
running the small family business, tending their rice fields and
looking after their pigs. She’s also caring for her sister’s two young
sons – like her husband, Ruon’s sister is in Thailand.
“It’s very difficult without my husband,” Roun said. “Sometimes when I am tired, I get really angry with the children.”
Ruon is not alone. According to local estimates, almost all the women
left in Moung Thbon are currently looking after someone else’s
children. Where Ruon differs is that, at 37, she is significantly
younger than the other women in the village, where the age profile
swings from juvenile to elderly with scarcely a pause in the middle.
A missing demographic
Thailand and Cambodia signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU)in
2003 as part of a regulatory framework for labour migration. However,
according to a spokesperson from the International Labour Organization,
fewer than 10 per cent of Cambodian workers register under the MoU since
the risk of deportation is relatively low.
Many seem to accept the possibility of going to prison as just one of
the prices to be paid for the chance to work across the border.
Battambang, Banteay Meanchey and Siem Reap provinces were
administered by Thailand for more than 100 years until 1907, and
migration across the border remains common.
Over the past five years, well over half the villagers in Moung Thbon have sought work across the border.
“There are 164 families in the village,” said commune councillor Tin
Kimsun. “But 100 of those are always going backwards and forwards to
Thailand.”
The 164 families counted by Kimsun include 15 families – both parents
and children – that no one has seen or heard of since they left for
Thailand five years ago.
No one can say for sure that these missing families are safe. The
risks associated with travelling to Thailand include imprisonment,
exploitation, cheating by brokers who say they can secure the correct
papers, and trafficking into sex work for women or fishing boats for
men.
Villagers are vaguely aware of the dangers. But for a community
without prospects, Thailand remains a tempting proposition. From Moung
Thbon, the border with Thailand may be twice as far away as booming Siem
Reap, but the salaries on the other side are also twice, sometimes
three times, as high.
Walking through the village, it’s easy to see where that money has
gone. Large houses with beautifully tiled roofs are on almost every
corner. The gates on most of them are barred though, a sign that the
owner is away in Thailand.
According to Kim Khemara, a social worker for Siem Reap-based NGO
Sala Baï, when you go into these houses, you often find that there is no
furniture inside. To build a big house is important. What the
neighbours cannot see is less so.
“If people stay here, there is nothing for them to do. We can produce
enough rice to eat, but after that there is nothing,” said commune
councillor Kimsun.
Villages left behind The Italian NGO GVC is currently trying to help
people in 45 villages across Battambang, Banteay Meanchey and Siem Reap
to share information and experiences through an EU-funded program,
MIGRA-SAFE, which aims to promote safe labour migration for vulnerable
Cambodians.
While undertaking research in the provinces, including in Moung Thbon
and Chan Leas Dai villages, they discovered the extent to which labour
migration was not only putting migrant workers at risk, but also
affecting the villages left behind.
“As people started to get more comfortable talking to us, we found
out that there were problems in the villages, too, when people left,”
said Laura Toscani, a program officer for GVC.
“For example, we kept hearing grandparents complaining that they
can’t control the children they are left behind to look after and raise,
and that they are relieved when they are finally old enough to go to
Thailand too.”
The children in the village are cagey and sit among their
grandmothers in silence while the women describe the challenges of
raising children a second time around.
“I’m very tired now,” said 63-year-old Pen Yen, who is looking after
three grandchildren belonging to two of her three sons who are all in
Thailand.
“But there is a lot more work to do – more washing, shopping, cooking
and cleaning. Sometimes the children are sad, and we don’t know what to
do. They don’t want to do anything, they won’t even eat.
“When we were mothers the first time, we were young and strong, and
had a lot of energy. It was easier, even though we all had nine or 10
children.”
According to the grandmothers, it is hard to force the children to go
to school when they don’t want to, and they can’t keep an eye on them
during the day either.
They worry about them drowning in the rice fields, taking drugs or
driving recklessly on the roads on new motos bought with their parents’
remittances.
In nearby Chan Leas Dai village, the prognosis was still more extreme: school simply wasn’t worth the trouble.
“Even if they finish school, they can’t get a job here. They still
have to go to Thailand,” explained commune councillor Chhean Chhit.
According to Laura Toscani from GVC, many families have compounded
this apparent lack of prospects by taking their children with them when
they migrate.
“We hear about children as young as seven or eight crossing the
border at night, terrified that they’re going to be found. If they need
to, they have to urinate or vomit where they’re standing,” she said.
In Thailand, the children do not attend school but sit at their
parents’ workplace all day waiting for them to finish. If they do return
to Cambodia, re-insertion into school is a challenge.
“There are two boys in my class who were in Thailand with their
parents,” explains 13-year-old Chheoun Simen, who goes to school in
Moung Thbon village. “But they don’t understand the classes anymore. So
they stop trying.”
Fears of fragmentation In Chan Leas Dai village, 10 kilometres away
from Moung Thbon, a group of grandmothers estimated that 90 per cent of
the working-age adults from the village were currently in Thailand.
One person described how it was hard to conduct ceremonies such as funerals when there was no one to attend them.
However, it soon became apparent that the community was more
concerned about families breaking apart under the stress of migration,
as normal social and legal constraints seem to become less applicable.
“When the husband and wife go to Thailand, sometimes the wife sees
another man, maybe more handsome, and then leaves to get another
husband,” complained villager Phat Chhorn.
“When it happens, the husband doesn’t say anything because there is
no way to complain to police or lawyers. In Cambodia, we have the law.
But the law in Thailand is not the same.”
When asked, the group conceded that husbands also did the same thing.
Social worker Kim Khemara, who has just spent three months touring 14
provinces interviewing candidates for this year’s student intake at his
NGO, raised another concern.
“The older people are not able to watch the children and protect them
from sexual violence. Young girls are raped, and no one can stop it. I
see this happening a lot,” he said.
Reviewing the situation as a whole, Khemara said he saw no hope for any imminent changes.
“People say they have no choice but to go to Thailand. They have no land and no job,” he explained.
“But when they go, things fall apart. It is hard because Cambodians
are very family-oriented and will work so hard to keep it together.
“But when they go outside, the family breaks more easily. Then the
grandparents are left with the children, and there is no income anymore
either.”
For those children left behind in half-deserted villages, the
powerful pull of Thailand becomes an inevitability, and the path is set
for them to follow in their parents’ footsteps.
“I don’t know how it can stop,” said Khemara. “I think it will happen for 20 years or more.”
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