A Change of Guard

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Friday, 11 July 2014

Thais detain ‘large number’

Migrant workers stand in a transport truck as they are returned to Cambodia by Thai border police at the Poipet border
Migrant workers stand in a transport truck as they are returned to Cambodia by Thai border police at the Poipet border in June. Hong Menea
A large group of Cambodian migrants were rounded up and detained in a Bangkok prison at the end of May, where many still remain, Thai officials told the Post yesterday.
Separate unconfirmed reports that at least 130 Cambodians had been in detention for more than a month emerged about a week ago.
The Thai Foreign Ministry yesterday declined to confirm a specific figure but said a “very large number” of Cambodians had been arrested.
Kobboon Sangmanee, a first secretary at the Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ Department of Information, said many Cambodian migrants held at Bangkok Remand Prison have already been deported, while some remain incarcerated, awaiting deportation.
“The number now is not even close to what it was before,” he said.
Third secretary Namrin Anukul said the migrants were “charged with illegal entry”, a claim disputed by other sources who said some migrants were charged with using expired work permits and others had not been charged at all.
Cambodian and other migrants are frequently detained briefly in Thailand as a result of labour law offences before being deported. Since a mass exodus of Cambodian workers from Thailand last month, migrants crossing illegally have been caught and expelled on a daily basis.
According to sources who declined to be named, Cambodians who have entered Thailand illegally can be detained for an “investigative period” of up to 48 days without being charged.
But while this often happens to small groups of migrants, large numbers being held for so long are more unusual, they added.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Koy Kuong said he was still awaiting confirmation on the number of Cambodians being held at the prison yesterday.
“I still have no information. The embassy in Bangkok is still searching for it,” he said.
Relevant officials within the embassy couldn’t be reached for comment yesterday.
One source with knowledge of the matter said the prisoners are expected to be released by Wednesday, exactly 48 days since May 30, the date many were allegedly detained.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

too bad cambodia is not bordering with the US... they are welcoming all illegals and are even borrowing money from other countries to feed and lodge them against the will of the people , of course but politicians need more vote for their next election and these illegals will help them since it does not require any paper to vote in this country... soon this country will be all speaking spanish ...instead of english because the illegals refuse to learn english and begin to create their own community where all business signs are in spanish, business done in spanish language.. and some stupid american business owners begin to advertise in spanish in order to attract them as customers... now imagine if cambodia is next to the US we could turn this country into a khmer speaking country in about 50 years or so just like they are doing now.