UPDATED ON:
Thursday, June 05, 2008
17:47 Mecca time, 14:47 GMT
 
Programmes 101 East
Thai Migrant Labour

 Migrant workers from Myanmar collect the
day's catch at a Thai fishing port
In April this year, 54 illegal Myanmar migrants died while being smuggled to the Thai resort island of Phuket. They suffocated in the back of a crowded refrigerator truck, when the air-conditioning system failed.

But their tragic story is only one of many.

Thailand is a magnet for cheap migrant labour from all over South East Asia - Cambodia, Laos and particularly Myanmar.

Willing workers are smuggled across Thailand's porous borders to take up the so-called "3D" jobs – demanding, dirty, and dangerous - that Thais don't want.

Over two million migrant workers have now made Thailand their home, and the majority of them are illegal.

As they toil on farms, fishing boats and building sites, adding to Thailand's prosperity, these foreign workers are exploited by trafficking gangs and ruthless employers.

This week, 101 East looks at how a migrant's search for a better life in Thailand, can often lead to hardship or even death.

Joining host Teymoor Nabili to discuss the issue is Nara Rattanarut from Thailand's Ministry of Labour, Sunai Phasuk from Human Rights Watch, and Associate Professor Giles Ungpakorn from Chulalongkorn University.

Watch part one of this episode of 101 East

Watch part two of this episode of 101 East

This episode of 101 East aired on Thursday, May 05, 2008


To
contact us click on 'Send your feedback' at the top of the page

Watch Al Jazeera English programmes on YouTube

Join our debates on the Your Views page

 Source: Al Jazeera
 
ARTICLE TOOLS
 Email Article  Email article
 Print Article  Print article
 Send Feedback  Send feedback
 Share article  Share article