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Friday, September 20, 2024

Abused laborers to get $1.3m

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BANGKOK—A Thai tuna processing factory has agreed to pay staff A $1.3-million compensation for a litany of labor abuses, an official said Tuesday, a rare victory for migrant workers in the kingdom’s scandal-stricken seafood industry.

Hundreds of Myanmar laborers at Golden Prize Tuna Canning, a processing plant in Samut Sakhon that sells fish to markets around the globe, have spent months seeking compensation for exploitative working conditions.

Thailand is the world’s third-largest seafood exporter, but the industry is plagued with rights abuses and fueled by trafficked labor from neighboring Myanmar and Cambodia.

The sector has come under heightened scrutiny from foreign governments over the past year, with the European Union currently weighing an all-out ban on Thai fishing products.

The United States also passed a bill last week outlawing goods produced by forced labor that could see Thailand targeted with import bans.

Rights groups say Golden Prize workers had long been subject to unlawfully low salaries, supervisor abuse and a lack of compensation for machine accidents on the 25-acre processing sites. 

Following a more than 1,000-strong worker strike last week, company representatives joined negotiations with military officers, government officials and migrant worker leaders, reaching an agreement late Monday evening.

“The company began paying 1,100 workers last night involving money of 48 million baht [$1.3m],” Boonlue Sartpetch, the head of the province’s labor department, told AFP Tuesday. 

He said 700 workers haD been paid, with the rest expected to receive compensation Tuesday.

Golden Prize Tuna Canning, whose 2,000 workers hail mostly from Myanmar, declined to comment.

The junta that seized power in a 2014 coup has struggled to revive Thailand’s flagging economy and is desperate to avoid any costly sanctions on the multi-billion-dollar seafood sector.

It remains to be seen how Washington will enforce its new legislation on slave-produced goods.

But the US labor department currently lists Thai fish and shrimp as products the government has reason to believe are manufactured by slave labor.

Thai officials say they have moved fast to clean up the industry with new laws and crackdowns on traffickers and fish factories.

This month Thai police said they arrested more than 100 people on trafficking charges linked to the fishing industry.

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