Thursday, July 5, 2012

Plights of Myanmar immigrant workers


Although Thailand is not a place of greener pasture for Myanmar migrant workers, this year saw the largest number of them there as they could earn more as the demand of workforce is getting high there.

Temporary passports for the migrant workers have been issued under the agreement between the two countries since 27-12-2011, 22 days after the ‘Friendship Bridge’ was reopened. However, more migrant workers are still pouring into Myawady. Like relay runners who carry sticks step by step to the goal, Carries (people who illegally take migrant workers to Thailand for cash) recruit new ones even in small towns and countryside. The recruiters send them to agents in Yangon who send them again to Myawady where they were accommodated in houses, warehouses and hostels by company agents and fed just enough to survive for one to two months. Thousands of them were stranded in Myawady before they could manage to enter Thailand.

A resident from Wande Village said in disappointment, “Agent U Maung Thaung from Pesinan Village in Rakhine State told us that he was asked to look for workers for the workshop in Thailand where his son was working. He also guaranteed that we could get job after staying in Myawady for one week. He asked for K 200,000 for passport from each of us. Now, I have been here for about three months and had to borrow K 300,000 from our friends. I am in debt. It is still uncertain when I can work in Thailand.”

Another youth from Yethataung said bitterly, “Recruiters in small towns send one group of migrant workers after another although the agents here do not do anything to get passports for those who have been in Myawady for two or three months. Like fish in a trap, about 20 of us are forced to sleep in a hostel room which is suitable for only ten people.

Ko Kyaw Kyaw from Kyauktaw Township said, “Some of us could not help crying although they are men when they knew they were naïve enough to trust the agents. People are now saying that those who talk fluently can work as agents. It is easy for migrant workers in Myawady to cry but difficult for them to sob. We cannot ask for the agent fees back although we want to go back to our village because we can’t stand the situation here anymore. We feel as if we were punished to live under restrictions and survive on meager food because we thought highly of other countries.”

Whether they went there legally or illegally, no one has come back from Thailand because they could not find jobs there. Only those who were arrested by Thai authorities came back to their towns. There might be a labor shortage if Myanmar needed labor force as large as Thailand. It is true that migrant workers tend to forget what they have suffered in Myawady when they get passports to work in Thailand. However, they have to work in jobs that are not stated in their job contracts signed with the agents of Thai employers at passport offices.

“I signed a contract at the passport office to work for a construction firm, but I have to fell trees in the forest. It is dangerous and awful. I get 300 baht per day but I cannot enjoy my wage for days I do not need to work. I’m not sure whether I will be able to send K 100,000 to my family as I have to spend my wages on food, shelter and the water and electricity bills,” said Ko Tun Maung Hla from Yathetaung Township on a phone interview.

Myanmar migrant workers have to endure the deceptions of their employers and agents. They are wondering who they can complain with when they are forced to do the work that is not stated in the contracts or when their wages are cut.

“Whether they work legally or illegally in Thailand, Myanmar migrant workers are subject to oppression of Akyes and Wunnas in addition to exploitation of their employers. They will have to endure the hardship as long as they can earn here as much as they are now doing in neighboring countries. Workers in Myanmar do no earn enough to pay for their food, shelter, clothing and education expenses of their children in Myanmar. That is why thousands of Myanmar workers are migrating to Thailand every day. They will still be going there in the future,” said Ko Than Aye who is working in Maha Chiang.

Hundreds of Myanmar workers go to Thailand illegally while others go there by managing to get passports. Agents from Myawady transfer immigrant workers to guides who know the jungle tracks to Bangkok well. However, only a few of them reach Bangkok while most of them are arrested by Thai military and police forces and robbers. They have to pay a deposit of baht 6,000 in advance to the guides whether they reach their destination or they are arrested. When they can manage to get to their work sites, they have to pay up to 12,000 baht.

Another illegal to route to Bangkok is to go there in vehicles of the authorities. Although it costs a migrant worker 10,000 baht for ordinary service and 14,000 baht for special service to get to Thailand, those who can afford prefer the special service.

“I worked in the paddy fields in my village. I came here as a youth offered to send me here for 1,000 baht. It took us 12 days to set out from Yelekyun. Food was very bad and living conditions were terrible. At night, we travelled and hid in the forest during the daytime. Let alone meals, we did not even have snacks to eat. We had to climb one mountain after another with only a little drinking water. We were very tired. Our limbs were ached. Some of us fell down again and again. One rainy night, a Thai army force arrested us while we were taking shelter in a hut. We were detained for 15 days in Mae Sot. The youth who sent us there got the deposit of 6,000 baht for sixty of us. He never turned up again. We were sent from Mae Sot to Luthon border gate in Myawady on 2.6.2012. There was no one to pay cash for our release. We did not have any money with us and sought help from a motorist to find money for us. We had to ask for money from our relatives in our native village for our release. We had only one meal during the two days, and a woman fainted during the custody there,” said Ko Sein No Aung who trusted agents and went to work in Thailand.

The border gate in Myawady has been a place where we were exploited by our own fellow citizens. The in-charge of the gate said, “We always collect gate fees for illegal migrant workers sent back from Thailand. You must pay for your release. As I am in-charge here, you must pay me.”

We are wondering who has assigned him at the border gate to blackmail illegal migrant workers sent back from Thailand. It is also known to all that the gate in-charge is blackmailing and exploiting migrant workers in the absence of supervision form district authorities.

However, a lot of migrant workers are still going to work in Thailand and a lot more of them are preparing to go to Thailand.

From Eleven News Agency

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