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Share South Korea halves workers in first half Tue, 16 March 2021 Despite the Covid-19 pandemic, the South Korean government will fulfil 50 per cent of its quota of Cambodian applicants for jobs in the country in the first half of the year, officials said. In a Facebook post on March 15, Minister of Labour and Vocational Training Ith Sam Heng said South Korea’s Ministry of Employment and Labour would accept applications from 22,697 Cambodian migrant workers under its Employment Permit System (EPS) for this year. “The total number of migrant workers in 2021 permitted to apply is 22,697. Of this, 16,261 are for the industrial sector; 5,778 in the agriculture and livestock sector; and 658 in the construction sector,” the post said. ....
Despite the Covid-19 pandemic, the South Korean government will fulfil 50 per cent of its quota of Cambodian applicants for jobs in the country in the first half of the year, officials said. ....
S Korea halves workers in first half phnompenhpost.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from phnompenhpost.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
For the past two weeks, Cambodian migrant Mony Sunret has been hanging around an electrical workshop in the Thai province of Rayong, hoping to pick up odd jobs and save enough money to make a covert exit from Thailand. Sunret, who recently returned to Thailand after leaving due to coronavirus restrictions last March, decided to flee once again when he found out his work permit was fake - putting him at risk from a government crackdown on undocumented workers. It s like the old Khmer proverb: turn left, face a tiger; turn right, face a crocodile, Sunret, 49, said of his year-long back and forth across the border. ....
26 Feb 2021 / 08:03 H. COVID-19 takes heavy toll on Thailand s Cambodian migrants Many have been criss-crossing border in search of work Landmines, border crackdowns and smugglers imperil journey Debts, fees charged by migrant brokers add to their woes By Matt Blomberg PHNOM PENH, Feb 26 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - For the past two weeks, Cambodian migrant Mony Sunret has been hanging around an electrical workshop in the Thai province of Rayong, hoping to pick up odd jobs and save enough money to make a covert exit from Thailand. Sunret, who recently returned to Thailand after leaving due to coronavirus restrictions last March, decided to flee once again when he found out his work permit was fake - putting him at risk from a government crackdown on undocumented workers. ....