By Mom Kunthear and Bridget Di Certo
Wednesday, 09 May 2012
Phnom Penh Post
Every day they come in the thousands and crowd under a blazing sun for
hours, awaiting a moment that costs them more than two full months’
salary – a passport.
And where are they going?
“Thailand,” 21-year-old Sem Pheaktra said, squinting under a harsh mid-morning sun.
He,
and five other young men recruited by the Khemara company were waiting
in a thousand-strong crowd to have their photo taken at the new passport
office on Phnom Penh’s Mao Tse Toung Boulevard.
“I am going to
work in Thailand through [a recruiter],” the Kratie province native
said. “I don’t need to pay for the passport, the company just cuts back
my salary to pay for it.”
Cambodians pay about US$160 for a passport, more than double the average monthly garment factory salary of $61.
Sem Pheaktra expects to earn about $200 a month working at a factory in Thailand.
“Nowadays,
I don’t have any work to do besides farming, and I cannot earn any
money to help improve my family’s living standard,” he said.
Sem
Pheaktra will wait up to three months to receive his passport and then
will enter Thailand as a migrant worker, an opportunity he, and many
others, view as golden.
The destination is the same for
23-year-old Khom Seiha, who was waiting with two fellow recruits from
recruiter C.T.Asia Labour Co, Ltd, said.
“I will go to work in a
factory in Thailand where I can work in electronics, constructions,
seasoning product and canning food."
"I will earn about $300 a
month, and that is higher than what I get from my factory, which is only
$61 per month,” he said, adding that he is happy to get a higher salary
and a new job, but that he was worried about moving to Thailand.
“I
am worried about my safety, but if I stay here and am poorer, I will
still be afraid,” Khom Sieha said. “To go to another country is the only
way I can support my family.”
Nearby, 56-year-old Pen Vanny held
similar fears for her son, who was waiting for his passport photo. Toun
Eng was going to work in Thailand, but he couldn’t recall the name of
the recruitment company that was sending him.
“I do not know what
kind of job I will get, because the company officials did not tell me,
but they asked me to get my passport first,” Toun Eng said.
His mother was agitated. “I cannot force him to stay here where he is only getting a low salary,” she said.
“But I am so afraid and worried about my son’s security in Thailand.”
And she has every reason to be, according to labour groups here.
Despite
perceptions of a lack of opportunity in Cambodia and better rewards in
Thailand, the reality migrant workers face across the border is not
always ideal, Dave Welsh, country director for the American Center for International Labor Solidarity, said yesterday.
“Wages in Thailand, strictly speaking, will be better, but the cost of living is also much higher,” Welsh said.
“And
the Cambodian government doesn’t do a good enough job to look out for
workers – there is no labour attaché, and even if workers go to Thailand
with a formal contract, it is a bit of a red herring,” he said. “There
is no one there to monitor conditions.”
Moeun Tola, head of the
Community Legal Education Center’s labour project, pointed to the recent
example of Phattana Seafood Company in Thailand where both documented
and undocumented migrant workers from Cambodia were living under harsh
and exploitative conditions.
“Wage promises were not implemented
and workers were slaves,” Moeun Tola said. “It is so sad to see
thousands and thousands of Cambodian people go long term to another
country.
“I support the appeal from the prime minister for
workers to stay in Cambodia. For low-skilled workers, there is abundant
employment in Cambodia,” he added.
Chea Vuthy, communication officer for the Council for the Development of Cambodia, agreed.
“If
you cannot find a job, come to the Ministry of Labour, there are many
many jobs for Cambodians in Cambodia and we need them to stay to help
the country,” Chea Vuthy said.
Last week, Prime Minister Hun Sen
called for Cambodians to take up opportunities in booming agriculture
and construction industries in the Kingdom.
Welsh agreed that
industries such as the construction and garment sector were crying out
for more workers, but constant flouting of the law in contractual
arrangements and a lack of marketing made these jobs unattractive or
simply invisible to the majority of Cambodians.
Pich Vanna,
deputy chief of Cambodia-Thai border relations, said that Cambodians
crossing to Thailand for work had become a “habit” for poor Cambodians.
Chea
Manith, director of the Poipet Transit Centre, said the numbers of
Cambodians without documents being sent back from Thailand numbered
18,700 in April, an enormous jump from 8,700 in March.
At the month-old passport office in Phnom Penh, it seems the documentation is being tackled, but not the “habit”.
An official peered out across the mass of people obstructing the sidewalk down the block.
“There
are 5,000 to 7,000 that come here every day,” he said. “That’s why the
office moved. The old office was too narrow for everyone to line up.”
To contact the reporters on this story: Mom Kunthear at kunthear.mom@phnompenhpost.com
Bridget Di Certo at bridget.dicerto@phnompenhpost.com
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