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WSWS : News
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South Korea begins to deport migrant workers
By Terry Cook
8 December 2003
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The South Korean government has launched a vicious campaign
to deport 120,000 so-called illegal migrant workersmore
than half the countrys 230,000 foreign workers. Roundups
by 50 specially-formed squads of immigration officials are to
take place for 10 days each month up to June next year.
The National Assembly passed the Employment Permit System,
the framework for the crackdown, in July. Under its provisions,
undocumented foreign workers who have been in South Korea for
less than three years had until October 31 to apply for a work
permit. Those living in the country for more than three years
and less than four had to leave by November 14 but could apply
to return. All others faced automatic deportation with no prospect
of returning.
According the Ministry of Law, the first 10-day roundup carried
out last month resulted in the detention of 880 illegal
workers of whom 414 were deported. Prior to November 14, the countrys
international airports were packed with migrant workers scrambling
to make the deadline.
Many of the workers came from China, the Philippines, Thailand,
Indonesia, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh in the late 1980s,
during South Koreas economic expansion. They were employed
in jobs normally shunned by Koreansthe so-called three-D
jobs: dirty, dangerous and degrading. Most migrant employees
were paid half the wage of a Korean worker and many received far
less.
Thousands of guest workers were brought to South Korea via
the notorious Industrial Technical Trainees Scheme introduced
in 1991, which purported to offer training to recruits from so-called
developing countries. Under the scheme, guest workers were given
a six-month visa with a possible extension of six months.
In reality, the trainees were bonded to employers who sponsored
themnormally small or medium sized companiesand used
as a cheap labour. Abused and badly treated, tens of thousands
of trainees fled their bonded employment to seek better-paid alternative
work. By leaving the trainee schemes, however, they automatically
became undocumented and their illegal status often
resulted in even greater exploitation.
Given the obvious benefits of a ready pool of cheap and compliant
labour, it is little wonder that many employers have opposed the
present wave of deportations. Some, however, are taking advantage
of the situation by withholding wages owed to illegal workers.
Reuters reported last month, for example, that over $US2.6 million
in wages owed to 1,460 workers were being withheld.
The deportations are devastating for the migrant workers, especially
those with families in their home countries who depend on remittances.
Many are weighed down with debt, having paid large sums of money
to recruiting agents for jobs or temporary permits to enter South
Korea. One Pakistani worker said he had sold everything to borrow
$US5,000 from a job broker to get a visa. He explained that the
brokers in his town were not informing potential recruits of the
new laws in South Korea.
Faced with deportation, a number of migrant workers committed
suicide in November. Two hung themselves, one threw himself under
a train and another jumped off a passenger boat while being deported.
Seo Sun-Myong, a pastor working with migrants, angrily declared:
This is not suicide. They were killed by a government policy
that was trying to force them to go back home.
Thousands of illegal migrants have gone into hiding and exist
in appalling living conditions. Hunted by squads of officials,
they do not venture onto the streets to buy food and other provisions
for fear of being seized. Many are continuing to work at night
in the factories where they were previously employed. Others have
gone into hiding in the countryside.
According to one report, few migrant workers are now seen on
the streets of Inchons large Namdong Industrial Complex,
where more than 10 percent of the 60,000-strong workforce comprised
guest workers. Employers who harbour or fail to report illegal
migrant workers face fines of 20 million won ($US17,000) or two
years jail.
The crackdown on illegal migrants was launched amid deepening
economic and political problems besetting the government. President
Roh Moo-hyun is currently embroiled in a corruption scandal following
allegations that his chief financial backer Kan Keum-won, a textile
businessman, was involved in embezzlement and tax evasion.
His administration confronts rising levels of unemployment
and mounting labour unrest, which are expected to escalate as
the economy slows further. According to an OECD report in November,
South Koreas growth rate this year is predicted to be just
3 percent, down from 6.3 percent in 2002. Under these conditions,
the government is seeking to make migrant workers the scapegoat
for its own failure to alleviate the countrys growing social
crisis.
The overall unemployment rate currently stands at a two-year
record high of 3.7 percent. But among 15- to 29-year-olds, the
figure is 7 percent. According a recent government report, young
people take 12.4 months on average to find jobs after graduation
or after dropping out of schoolan increase on last years
average of 11.7 months. Unemployed youth may now be forced to
take the low-paid jobs previously filled by undocumented migrant
workers.
Over the past 12 months, guest workers have been increasingly
involved in campaigns for labour rights. Thousands have been involved
in demonstrations alongside Korean workers to demand an end to
repressive labour laws and the introduction of legislation to
protect the rights of workers, including granting legal status
to all immigrant workers. The provisions of the Employment Permit
System, which allow some migrant workers to gain work permits,
were designed at least in part to divide the mounting opposition.
The protests are continuing, however. More than 2,000 migrant
workers and South Korean supporters have been staging sit-ins
at the Myongdong Cathedral, the Seoul Anglican Cathedral and the
Kyungnam Migrant Workers Counsel Office, demanding a halt to the
deportations and the withdrawal of the new permit system.
See Also:
Thousands of workers in South
Korea strike against repressive labour laws
[19 November 2003]
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