Migrants’ work permits being extended
Thai authorities have issued the extension of work permits for migrant workers from Burma, Cambodia and Laos to receive one year work-permit to work in Thailand, according to a document received by Chiangmai based Migrant Assistance Program (MAP).
By
Hseng Khio Fah
13 January 2009
On
7 January, authorities from Department of Employment (DOE) in Thailand announced
that there are 88,787 migrant workers whose work permit will expire in 2009.
They are requested to prepare the necessary documents such as the old work
permit (pink card) or receipt of the work permit registration, medical
certificate or receipt of medical checkup and insurance, and application form
Tor Thor 13.
The report said that those work-permits must be finished
extending by the scheduled date from 5-20 January, 2-28 February, 4 May to 30
June 2009 depending on when their existing work permit expires. In February of
2010 all Burmese migrants will have to return to their home country to apply for
a new system of legal work-permit papers from the Burmese authorities.
On 6 January at 20:00, local authorities in Chiangmai called on
representatives of the Workers Solidarity Association (WSA) also based in
Chiangmai to discuss work permits to be issued by the Burmese junta, according
to Sai Hawm Khurh from WSA.
“They [Thai authorities] said there won’t be
an extension of work permits again next year. So, they have started to collect
names [of current workers] to begin work under this new system. They told us to
give our names to apply for it,” said Sai Hawm Khurh.
“We will be in the
cross fire, if they [Thai authorities] really do as they say,” he said. If this
new system is implemented, migrant workers will be unable to stay or work in
Thailand because their old permit has expired. They will also be under threat of
persecution by Burmese officials, upon their return to their hometowns.
The passports registration offices have been planned to open along the
Thai-Burma border at Myawaddy, Tachilek and Kawthawng.
Thai authorities
could also move a work-permit registration office from Tachilek to Chiangmai, in
northern Thailand, to accommodate migrants who don’t want to go to the border,
said Sai Hawm Khurh.
“However, we would like to stress that we are
still afraid to believe this new information due to lessons learnt from the
past.”
Thailand and Burma agreed to set up nationality identification
centers for Burmese migrant workers in 2006. However, the two countries failed
to successfully implement the agreement. Instead when the migrant workers
returned to their homes in Burma, junta authorities terrorized their families
coercing them to pay bribes, after using their personal information received
through the work permit process, to find their relatives.
Thailand had
also set up centers with the governments of Laos and Cambodia as well. These
centers have so far processed some 70,000 Lao and Cambodia workers and
registered them with the Thai Labor Department, according to a report from
Irrawaddy in November 2008.


