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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
Thailand expels thousands of Burmese immigrant workers
By Sarath Kumara
7 December 1999
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this version to print
Last month Thai authorities began to accelerate the expulsion
of thousands of Burmese immigrant workers, particularly in the
Mae Sot district on the Thai-Burma border. In the mid-1990s the
area became a centre for clothing manufacture, fruit orchards
and associated canneries, with investment attracted by a supply
of ample cheap labour from Burma. Some 100 factories, previously
employing about 70,000 illegal Burmese workers, were
in operation.
The Thai government deployed around 2,000 personnel, including
policemen, soldiers, immigration and labour officials, to round
up and drive out Burmese illegals from Mae Sot. Workers
were herded onto large trucks, driven to unguarded border crossings
and ordered to leave. According to a Reuters report in mid-November,
Their departure has left factories, nearby farms and streets
of a town where the Burmese language was as commonly heard as
Thai, all but deserted.
Hundreds of Burmese workers reportedly fled into the jungle,
without adequate food, shelter or protection, in order to avoid
being deported. At least two instances have been recorded of Thai
farmers killing workers after mistaking them for thieves.
Workers, many of them young women, found themselves pawns in
the tensions between Thailand and Burma that led to the Burmese
military junta closing the border on October 1. On November 3,
three Thai passenger boats were turned back after they attempted
to unload hundreds of workers at the Burmese border town of Myawaddy,
opposite Mae Sot. Burmese troops threatened to shoot anyone who
stepped out of the craft, on the grounds that anti-government
groups might be among them.
In spite of this, the Thai attempts at repatriation continued.
Hundreds of workers were left stranded on sandbars and islets
in the middle of the Moei River, which forms the border of the
two countries. At least eight people, including a child, drowned
while trying to swim back to Thailand.
Kachadpai Burusapatana, the secretary-general of the Thai National
Security Council, dismissed media reports that young women forced
over the border had been raped by Burmese troops with the callous
declaration that, as the incidents were occurring on Burmese territory,
the matter was out of Thailand's hands.
The Thai government's declared aim is to expel some one million
foreign workers, of which an estimated 600,000 are Burmese. During
the Asian economic boom, Thailand allowed employers in 18 industries
to hire immigrant workers, to offset labour shortages. These industries
included fisheries, garments, rubber plantations and orchards,
rice mills and construction. Employers were permitted to pay foreign
workers wages as low as 50-90 baht per day, far less than
the minimum wage of around 130 baht per day. The immigrants were
not entitled to welfare or medical benefits. Employers actively
encouraged hundreds of thousands of workers from neighbouring
countries to come into Thailand, while authorities turned a blind
eye to that fact large numbers did so without official permits
or visas.
The situation changed rapidly in 1997. The value of the Thai
currency fell 42.9 percent against the US dollar in less than
six months. According to Asian Development Outlook 1999,
the Thai economy, which enjoyed a 5.5 percent growth in 1996,
contracted by 0.4 percent in 1997 and 8.0 percent in 1998. Official
unemployment soared to close to two million as thousands of small
and medium-sized firms went bankrupt and larger corporations carried
out heavy layoffs.
Foreign workers have been one of the first sections of the
working class to pay for the crisis. Both the government and the
media have sought to divert anger at the growth of unemployment
into a campaign against immigrants. Articles in the press attributed
the spread of drugs, AIDS and other diseases like elephantiasis
to Burmese workers. Police spokesmen claim that illegal immigrants
are responsible for rising crime levels. The campaign to drive
out foreign workers was backed by an array of draconian punishments,
with illegals and their employers facing massive fines
and possible imprisonment. Around 300,000 workers from Burma,
Laos and Cambodia were forced out of Thailand last year.
The only opposition to the mass deportations has come from
Thai businesses whose operations have been disrupted by the loss
of cheap labour. Speaking on their behalf, the Bangkok Post,
in an editorial on November 5, wrote: Thailand in all likelihood
will continue to need foreign labour for some time yet... industries
along the border, in particular construction, fisheries, transport
and manufacturing, are now dependent on Burmese labour. And even
though the economic crisis has thrown thousands of Thais out of
work, it seems there are not the local people to replace the foreign
labour. Most of the work is labour intensive and low paying...
The authorities simply will not be able to replace the illegal
labour.
Chinese businessmen from Taiwan and Hong Kong, who have combined
investment of more than one billion baht in Thailand, were major
employers of Burmese workers. Investors are said to be considering
shifting their production to countries like Indonesia, South Africa,
Madagascar and even to Burma itself to take advantage of even
cheaper sources of labour.
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