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Migrants jobless and trapped under Thai coronavirus lockdown


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Migrants jobless and trapped under Thai coronavirus lockdown

By Nanchanok Wongsamuth

 

2020-04-29T112036Z_1_LYNXNPEG3S0VG_RTROPTP_4_HEALTH-CORONAVIRUS-THAILAND.JPG

Volunteers give free foods for migrant workers from Myanmar who lost their jobs following the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Bangkok, Thailand April 23, 2020. REUTERS/Soe Zeya Tun - RC2BAG9UFD1Y

 

BANGKOK (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Htoo Gay War quit her job as a domestic worker in January because her employer refused to allow her to take one day off each week - just before Thailand reported its first case of the novel coronavirus pandemic.

 

Three months later, the pregnant 30-year-old from Myanmar has been unable to find a new job as Thailand has declared a state of emergency, shutting malls, schools and bars to curb the spread of the virus, which has infected some 3,000 people.

 

"I want to go home to be with my parents, because at least they can take care of me while I'm out of work and don't have any money," she said from the central province of Pathum Thani.

 

"But I can't go back now that the borders are closed," she said, adding that her family are scraping by on her husband's salary of 8,000 baht ($247) per month.

 

Thailand has about 2.8 million registered migrant workers mainly from Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos, government figures show. But the United Nations estimates that 2 million more work informally across the country.

 

At least half a million migrant workers in Thailand have been left unemployed as a result of the coronavirus crisis, estimates the Migrant Working Group (MWG), a network of non-governmental organisations promoting migrant rights.

 

"These workers will find it difficult to seek new jobs as many venues are still closed, and they also can't go back home and have very little access to government aid," said Adisorn Kerdmongkol, a coordinator at MWG.

 

Suchat Pornchaiwiseskul, director-general of the Department of Employment, said its policy was to help unemployed migrants find new jobs within 30 days.

 

"Thailand's labour law protects both Thai and foreign workers," Suchat said.

 

DEBT

Thailand has introduced a raft of measures to help workers affected by the coronavirus, including financial aid for informal Thai workers and for Thai and foreign workers registered under the social security system.

 

The Thomson Reuters Foundation spoke to seven migrant workers from Cambodia and Myanmar who said they did not receive government assistance because they were not formally registered.

 

One female worker who earned 120 baht a day at a beauty salon before it closed, said she owed money to a grocery store because she could not afford to pay for basic goods.

 

"I've been looking for a new job, but no one has been willing to accept me," said the worker, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because Thai law does not allow migrants to work in beauty salons.

 

About 60,000 migrant workers scrambled to leave Thailand in March before the land border was closed, as the shutting of businesses left them without an income.

 

Most migrant workers are not members of Thailand's social security scheme, said Jarrett Basedow, regional director of Issara Institute, a labour rights and anti-trafficking group.

 

"We have not yet talked to a migrant worker who has accessed this assistance," he said, adding that many work illegally, have not received a social security card or their employers have not paid the necessary contributions.

 

Unemployed people must contribute to social security for at least six months before they can receive benefits.

 

Basedow said many employers were laying off workers, often with no legal severance pay, by pressuring workers to sign resignation letters or not renewing their contracts.

 

"Many of these workers are worried about meeting their needs until they are able to return home, as they have no employment and high debt," he said.

 

Pasuta Chuenkhachorn, a lawyer with the Human Rights and Development Foundation, which provides legal aid to migrant workers and trafficking victims, said the government's financial aid measures discriminated against migrants.

 

"In times of crisis like this, the Thai government only takes care of Thai people," she said.

 

One glass factory worker from Myanmar said he and dozens of other workers were laid off on March 1, as orders had fallen.

 

He was unable to look for a new job because his passport and work permit were still with the agency that recruited him.

 

"There's no point in staying here anymore," he said by phone from Thailand's central Samut Prakan province.

 

"Once the borders are open, I'll go home. It's hard to find work here and I don't have my personal documents."

 

($1 = 32.4200 baht)

 

(Reporting by Nanchanok Wongsamuth @nanchanokw; Editing by Katy Migiro. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers the lives of people around the world who struggle to live freely or fairly. Visit http://news.trust.org)

 

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-- © Copyright Reuters 2020-04-30
 
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15 minutes ago, graemeaylward said:

How sad ???? I hope that the plight of migrant workers becomes a priority for those who wish to assist, as clearly the Government don't care. Neither it would seem do the employers who pay less than the minimum wage! Shame on them.

 

Agreed. I live near several large clothing manufacturing companies...make sport shirts and the like. 99% of workers are from Myanmar and the factories have been shut down now for more than a month. Even in good times some of the living conditions are pretty awful to see. There is a huge migrant camp right on a secondary artery off of Kanchanapisek road just about 2 kilometers from Central Westgate. They are hurting badly right now. 

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5 hours ago, tonray said:

Agreed. I live near several large clothing manufacturing companies...make sport shirts and the like. 99% of workers are from Myanmar and the factories have been shut down now for more than a month. Even in good times some of the living conditions are pretty awful to see. There is a huge migrant camp right on a secondary artery off of Kanchanapisek road just about 2 kilometers from Central Westgate. They are hurting badly right now. 

Same here There are a lot  Burmese/Myanmar who Live in Sahmut Prakan , The factory's have closed, they dont have enough money or means to go home,

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Agreed, the scientific evidence for the lockdown is not there. 
It will harm millions of people and possibly only save a few lives.

 

These countries are committing economic suicide, harming the poorest and most venerable.

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