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| Official estimates suggest there are over one million Cambodian men and women currently working overseas, with nearly all of them working in Thailand alone. Flickr user/ILO in Asia and the Pacific |
Cross-Border Labor Migration Surges in Cambodia, Raising Risk of Human Trafficking
The Asia Foundation | 14 Cambodia 2016
On Monday, Cambodia celebrated a National Day Against Human Trafficking,
drawing attention not only to the challenges the country faces, but
also to the strides that it has made in combatting trafficking. Last
year, Cambodia implemented the first national action plan against trafficking and in June, the U.S. State Department’s annual Trafficking in Persons Report
upgraded Cambodia to Tier 2 status from its Tier 2 Watch List. While
these are positive steps, a surge in cross-border migration is putting
an increasing number of Cambodian overseas workers at risk of
exploitation.
Official estimates suggest there are over one million Cambodian men
and women currently working overseas, the majority in Thailand. While
Korea and Japan are increasingly becoming sought-after destinations for
Cambodian migrants, they demand relatively higher qualifications,
including language proficiency and a significant financial package
necessary to support migration-related costs. Such demands are
prohibitive to the large majority of migrants who are forced to look for
alternative destinations like Thailand, where most migrants are
undocumented, working in construction, manufacturing, fishing, and the
agriculture and service sectors. According to the International Labor Organization
(ILO), only about 116,000 Cambodian migrants were recruited to work
legally in Thailand over the period of 2006-2016, with the remainder
going through illegal channels to obtain work. Many of these migrants
become victims of exploitation and trafficking.
Thailand is not the only destination where cases of abuse,
exploitation, and trafficking are happening. In 2011, Cambodia imposed a
ban on sending domestic helpers to Malaysia in response to a rise in
abuse cases. In December 2015, Cambodian and Malaysia signed a new
Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to resume deployment of low-skilled
workers to Malaysia, but as of now, no official recruitment has taken
place under the new terms.
Women are also increasingly taking great risks to migrate to China,
where many work through brokers who promise them job opportunities but
instead force them into marriages with Chinese men against their will.
Only 100 of the 7,000 Cambodian women that Chinese authorities say have
married men in China did so legally,
said Chou Bun Eng, secretary-general of the Interior Ministry’s
committee to fight human trafficking and sexual exploitation. In late
2015, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs reported that 679 trafficked
Cambodian migrant workers were repatriated from different countries
including China, Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam, and Saudi Arabia.
Also in 2015, Cambodia’s newly established National Committee for
Combating Trafficking in Persons (NCCT) began working with the Chinese
government to develop an MoU on Anti-Trafficking in Persons between the
two countries. An agreement, signed in October, while by no means
comprehensive, serves as the first legal framework surrounding
trafficking between the two countries.
The reasons that Cambodians migrate overseas for work are many, but
mostly driven by economic necessity. Currently about two-thirds of
Cambodian households are in debt, mostly to Micro-Finance Institutes
(MFIs) where the interest rates range from 25-41 percent per annum. This
has placed tremendous pressure on Cambodian families to repay their
loans, and migration has become an alternative income option to do so.
Another factor is related to a high school dropout rate across
Cambodia—21 percent at lower secondary and 27 percent at upper secondary
school. Those who drop out of school often help with the family’s
livelihood or migrate to find jobs in urban areas or overseas. The risk
of falling victim to trafficking and exploitation is highest for those
with limited education and limited access to information.
The Asia Foundation and local partner Khmer Youth Association (KYA)
are currently working in the three provinces known as hotbeds for
cross-border migration—Siem Reap, Prey Veng, and Kompong Cham—to reduce
the incidence of trafficking of young people. Last year, we conducted a
series of campaigns for a total of 2,580 students across schools to help
raise their awareness of trafficking issues and safe migration
practices. We also conducted half-day mobile campaigns, with
community-youth participants who spread messages about the risk of
trafficking on their bicycles, carrying loud speakers and banners to
raise awareness, and distributing booklets that shared real trafficking
stories and information about support services in Cambodia and abroad
that migrants can access.
By the end of the campaign, the majority of participants were able to
clearly articulate elements of smart labor migration, the consequence
of labor migration, and what they should do if they believe they are
being exploited or trafficked.
Since 2010, we have also been working with Kampuchean Action for Primary Education (KAPE) on a tertiary scholarship program
that has provided university scholarships to a total of 147 female high
school students from disadvantage families in Kompong Cham province,
one of the most densely populated provinces in Cambodia and the
second-largest origin community for young migrant laborers to Cambodia’s
cities. Ninety-eight percent of the past two cohorts of graduates were
successfully employed, and now serve as role models in their community
where parents are encouraged to invest in girls’ education.
In the end, a combined approach that teaches safe migration, empowers
households economically, and advances economic opportunity will be
essential to Cambodia’s efforts to end human trafficking.

Hmmm...how come you folks are silent about issues with Thailand? Are you so afraid of the Thais now a day?
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