CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS SLOW DOWN; FISHERIES, AGRICULTURE ALSO AFFECTED
MANY
 SECTORS, including construction in the capital, fisheries in the South 
and agriculture in border areas, are facing labour shortages due to the 
tough new labour law, sources said yesterday as migrant workers began 
returning to Thailand.
 A construction site of the Red Line train 
(Bang Sue-Rangsit) needed to slow down after many Myanmar workers left 
their work to reprocess work permits, an official said. 
 Workers 
at the construction site at Bang Sue central terminal also left work, 
even though they did not need to: they incorrectly believed that their 
“pink card” was no longer valid under the new law, the official added. 
He noted that those workers might take 10-20 days to check or reprocess 
the register before getting back to work.
 However, other construction sectors were less affected by the new 
law, since major construction firms usually hire legal workers, 
according to an official at the State Railway of Thailand who declined 
to be named. 
 Millions of migrant workers in Thailand were in a 
chaotic situation over the past week after the government issued a new 
decree to manage migrant workers. The decree took effect on June 23, 
threatening fines for employers of at least Bt400,000 for every illegal 
worker they hire. 
 Only a few days after the decision, Prime Minister General Prayut 
Chan-o-cha last Tuesday invoked his special powers under Article 44 to 
suspend four key articles of the decree until the end of the year. The 
suspended articles prescribe much harsher penalties against offending 
migrants and their employers until the end of this year. 
 The 
suspension came too late for many companies, as thousands of legal and 
illegal workers panicked over the tough punishment and rushed to go to 
their home countries to process or reprocess their work permits and to 
register. More than 50,000 migrant workers reportedly returned home 
since last month, mostly to Myanmar and Cambodia. 
 In order to 
end the chaos, the Labour Ministry will allow all Thai employers to 
register their Lao, Cambodian and Myanmar workers at temporary centres 
throughout the country from July 24 to August 7. 
 While Prime 
Minister Prayut said earlier that he believed the workers from 
neighbouring countries would return to work in Thailand as there are 
demands in the market, Nit Ouitengkor, former president of Ranong 
Chamber of Commerce, said they might not return due to complicated legal
 procedures. There are more jobs available in their countries, including
 Myanmar, since the economy there is now growing faster than Thailand’s,
 he said. 
 Ranong is Thailand’s southern port province, sitting 
next to Myanmar. The province is home to some of the most important 
fishery piers in the country. 
 Many piers in the province 
yesterday were seen almost empty, while some were working with only half
 of the normal workforce. While it is estimated that more than 5 million
 migrants from neighbouring countries are working in Thailand currently,
 it is estimated that only half of them are documented. 
 In the 
eastern border province of Sa Kaew, where there is a shortage of farm 
workers, local authorities coordinated with their Cambodian counterparts
 to encourage workers to cross the border to work. Many Cambodian 
workers have fled due to the new labour law in the past month, leaving 
many farms in trouble during the growing season. 
 Sa Kaew 
provincial immigration chief, Benjapon Rodsawad, said Cambodian people 
are allowed to cross the border to work temporarily in the area in order
 to ease the current labour shortage.
 With border pass papers, 
Cambodians would be allowed to enter and stay in Sa Kaew and 
neighbouring Pachin Buri province for seven days, he said, “so we have 
to strictly check their document in order prevent them from going deeper
 to other provinces or the capital”. 
Source - TheNation 
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