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7 factories in Samut Sakhon sealed until end of February, no staff allowed to leave


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3 hours ago, Bkk Brian said:

Really, you know that do you, can you provide some evidence? Yes throw a few pillows and a couple of mattresses in an unused area job done...........

 

You sound like one of the officials who made this negligent decision.

What would you do? Are you volunteering to pay all these thousands of workers 14 days in 5 star hotels? Thank you for your kindness. Please hand your bank account over to factory management. They'll be eternally grateful for your generous contribution.

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3 hours ago, PGSan said:

Bit since this is not the proportion for the ‘all of the country’, your premise is, at best, misleading and unproven, or possibly worse! 

Prove me wrong - I'm happy to be proved wrong, But no, wait, it would make Thailand look bad if they tested them all.

 

I would have thought the mantra prepare for the worst hope for the best would first in the covid time - and that means testing, not limited testing.

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7 hours ago, ThailandRyan said:

Sealed into the facility,.

Sounds to me like they have made it a prison compound.  Way to go Thailand in treating your workers with a total disregard to health and human services, and treating them like they are trash.  I can not understand the need to lock people into a location such as this without any true housing necessities, food, water, and basic everyday necessities.  This government can go ------themselves in my view.  They do not care to treat people with respect or dignity. 

 

Slave labor is what it reminds me of:

"This measure means the seven factories can continue to operate as normal, but their employees must remain within the factory compound at all times, said Dr. Kiatipoom."

 

 

 

 

 

These factories provide accommodation for the workers on-site.  The workers basically live there full time anyway.

 

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52 minutes ago, seancbk said:

 

 

These factories provide accommodation for the workers on-site.  The workers basically live there full time anyway.

 

I do believe some on here must have thought they jumped on a bus at 4:30 pm and popped back home....only a 10 hour hop.  We had Myanmar builders on site for 9 months living in what I would consider awful conditions but they appeared content.

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If a non infected person is locked up together with an infected person, there is a good chance that he will catch covid later on. Next he will be ready to pass on covid a few days later. And so on.

 

Will our fellow expats be locked up for life???

 

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37 minutes ago, DaLa said:

I do believe some on here must have thought they jumped on a bus at 4:30 pm and popped back home....only a 10 hour hop.  We had Myanmar builders on site for 9 months living in what I would consider awful conditions but they appeared content.

You believe wrong. I live close to a number of large migrant camps, this is how they travel to the factories and nearby workplaces. As for you're experience of them appearing content, a monkey in a circus can appear content. Did you talk to the workers and ask how they are feeling?

Thailand-Myanmar-Migrant-Labor-.jpg

Edited by Bkk Brian
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56 minutes ago, DaLa said:

I do believe some on here must have thought they jumped on a bus at 4:30 pm and popped back home....only a 10 hour hop.  We had Myanmar builders on site for 9 months living in what I would consider awful conditions but they appeared content.

Working in a factory is a lot different than building your house.  Your house is a short term job, their factory job is long term. Many have worked in the same factory for years 

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7 hours ago, jacko45k said:

 I would like to know......what legal premise to deny their basic human right of freedom. 

Isn't it the same for any of us in Thailand? Whether you're in ASQ at a 5 star hotel, flaged via contact tracing, or walk off the street into an ER, if you are diagnosed with COVID you are detained in a COVID Field Hospita, like it or not. Accommodations may vary, but your loss of freedom does not.

 

Probably not legal in most western countries, and probably responsible for Thailand's relatively low number of cases.

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4 hours ago, whaleboneman said:

These people did not choose to stay in an ASQ and don't necessarily have covid. They are being detained in their place of work for a month. Looks like Thailand has found a way to bring slavery in the fishing industry ashore.

Suppose a bunch of western expats became infected. Then the government decides that ALL expats will remain inside their homes for a month. How would you feel about that?

"Suppose a bunch of western expats became infected. Then the government decides that All expats will remain inside their homes for a month. How would you feel about that?".

 

Pretty much that exact scenario occurred in Phuket and Pattaya in April 2020. It didn't feel great at the time, but felt better as the cases subsided in Thailand while spiraling out of control in the west.

 

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1 hour ago, ftpjtm said:

Pretty much that exact scenario occurred in Phuket and Pattaya in April 2020.

I did not feel it was so bad at that time... but I actually volunteered to stay home mostly... nobody at the gate stopping me going out and the Mrs was off to the market daily. 

Needs must, and as the lockdown eased I was glad of the  way things were done. 

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2 minutes ago, jacko45k said:

I did not feel it was so bad at that time... but I actually volunteered to stay home mostly... nobody at the gate stopping me going out and the Mrs was off to the market daily. 

Needs must, and as the lockdown eased I was glad of the  way thigs were done. 

Exactly you were able to move around and do things.  Thank you for helping address the issues another poster brought up saying it was the same as in Phuket and Pattaya.

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13 minutes ago, ThailandRyan said:

You were not kept sequestered and locked into your house.  You could move around, just could not leave the Island of Phuket or leave the Pattaya Area itself.  The same occurred here in Bangkok, and outside of curfew you could move around freely.  There is a big difference between what you were allowed and what these migrant workers are being forced to do.  Get a grip and realize that this amounts to no ore than imprisonment, and a hell of a lot longer than a 14 day quarantine would be.  Tus they are ensuring all of the workers end up exposed and come down with the virus as it spreads through the facilities, while still keeping the factories operating at full capacity.  Can you understand the difference?

My point is that by choosing to be in Thailand during this pandemic (and pretty much always) you are choosing to give up freedoms you had in the west. 

 

If you are diagnosed with COVID in the US, you are given recommendations of what to do. You can choose to be hospitalized if it's severe, or choose to "tough it out" at home. It is recommended that you self quarantine, and in some cases you can be penalized if you don't, but you are not forced to quarantine. 

 

In Thailand if diagnosed with COVID you are sent to a field hospital. It's not optional, it's mandatory. You are not released until you are diagnosed as symptom free. This would also be considered to be imprisonment by some.

 

It was also effective in reducing the spread of COVID in Thailand. And as a person with homes in both Thailand and the US I chose to be here, in spite of the reduced freedoms, throughout the COVID pandemic. 

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13 minutes ago, ftpjtm said:

My point is that by choosing to be in Thailand during this pandemic (and pretty much always) you are choosing to give up freedoms you had in the west. 

 

If you are diagnosed with COVID in the US, you are given recommendations of what to do. You can choose to be hospitalized if it's severe, or choose to "tough it out" at home. It is recommended that you self quarantine, and in some cases you can be penalized if you don't, but you are not forced to quarantine. 

 

In Thailand if diagnosed with COVID you are sent to a field hospital. It's not optional, it's mandatory. You are not released until you are diagnosed as symptom free. This would also be considered to be imprisonment by some.

 

It was also effective in reducing the spread of COVID in Thailand. And as a person with homes in both Thailand and the US I chose to be here, in spite of the reduced freedoms, throughout the COVID pandemic. 

We are talking about Migrant workers not Expats.  Stay on OP, and review the initial OP story to understand that the Migrant workers are being sealed up until the end of February in the factory they work in.  They do not get to go back and forth to their homes nearby.  I live here in Bangkok and am fully aware of what the regulations are for hospitalization if you test positive for Covid, and it does not require me to be sealed up in a factory even if I have tested negative. 

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3 hours ago, ThailandRyan said:

We are talking about Migrant workers not Expats.  Stay on OP, and review the initial OP story to understand that the Migrant workers are being sealed up until the end of February in the factory they work in.  They do not get to go back and forth to their homes nearby.

And my point is that expats and Thais can be subjected to similar circumstances. 

 

Expats and Thais on ASQ are sealed up in a facility and not allowed to go to their homes which may be nearby. 

 

Population centers with high COVID infection rates, inclusive of many expats, have had their movements severely restricted to minimize the spread of COVID. 

 

Segregating infected persons has not been carried out as forcefully in much of the western world, where infections are exponentially higher, and likely could not be because it would be illegal. 

 

Like it or not, that's the way the pandemic is being handled in Thailand. If you have a huge objection to it, you shouldn't be in Thailand. 

 

 

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