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Labourers sorting fish as they work on a Thai fishing boat in Sattahip, Thailand’s Rayong province. Photo: AFP

Forced labour continues on Thai fishing vessels despite legal reforms and arrests

The US State Department said on Wednesday that forced labour on Thai fishing vessels has continued in the past year despite legal reforms and arrests following an Associated Press investigation into the country’s seafood industry.

The department made the assessment in its annual global review of human rights practices, released in Washington by Secretary of State John Kerry. The report covers the 2015 calendar year.

The report finds that the Thai government has reaffirmed its “zero tolerance” policy for human-trafficking and updated many laws that enhance regulatory powers and increase punishment for violations. An amended anti-trafficking law provides protection to whistle-blowers and gives authorities the power to halt operations temporarily or suspend licenses of businesses and vehicles involved in human-trafficking.

But the report says, “the lack of clarity in law and practice on what constitutes forced labour or debt bondage undermined the government’s efforts to identify labour trafficking victims and prosecute forced labour”.

Migrant workers from Myanmar and Thais sort out fish at Mahachai port in Samut Sakhon, Thailand. Photo: AP

Reports of abusive work environments, including forced labour, continued in many sectors, including Thai-flagged seagoing trawlers and labour-intensive industries such as food and seafood processing facilities, according to the department. Up to 90 per cent of workers in the seafood processing industry were migrant workers, it says.

The department cites the AP investigative series on slavery in the seafood industry that resulted in the rescue of 2,000 men, a dozen arrests, millions of dollars’ worth of seizures, closure of some shrimp-peeling sheds, and proposals for new national laws.

The men, mostly from Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos, were recruited in Thailand and brought to Indonesia using fake travel documents where they were subjected to brutal labour abuses. Some had been enslaved for years or decades.

Later in the year, the department will issue a separate report that focuses on human-trafficking and exploitative labour and ranks governments on their performance in combating those abuses. Thailand, along with Iran, Syria and Zimbabwe, was last year among 23 countries receiving the lowest ranking in the annual US assessment.

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