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Thailand raises alarm over bogus recruitment as online scams rise

by Nanchanok Wongsamuth | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Tuesday, 19 May 2020 13:03 GMT

Thai official says applicants are paying for jobs that never materialise

(Removes repetition in par 11)

By Nanchanok Wongsamuth

BANGKOK, May 19 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Thailand is struggling to tackle a rise in online recruitment scams promising jobs abroad that never materialise, with many appearing on Facebook, a senior official said on Tuesday.

The head of the Department of Employment (DOE) said there had been more than 1,500 complaints in the past three years about overseas job postings, involving payments to recruiters of more than 100 million baht ($3.14 million).

Suchat Pornchaiwiseskul said the method of recruiting people to work overseas had shifted from using agents to approach job seekers to using online advertising through social media such as Facebook and Line, a chat app.

Facebook said it did not allow misleading or false advertising and would remove content that violated its policies.

"The licensed companies are mostly operating under the law, but we are facing difficulty with recruiters operating on Facebook," said Suchat, director-general of the DOE.

"We don't know who these people are, making it hard for us to track them down."

More than 133,000 Thais work overseas as unskilled labourers, waiters and waitresses, massage therapists, agricultural workers and factory workers mostly in Asia.

Wirawan Mosby, an activist who works with the government's anti-human trafficking task force, said in many cases, jobseekers are tricked into sending a "processing fee" to agents promising well-paid jobs abroad.

"These end up being money scams where the so-called recruiters don't show up at the airport and block the job seekers on social media," she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

The government said it had taken legal action against more than 800 fake recruitment agents in the past three years.

Twelve of the 130 recruitment agencies registered with the government had their licences temporarily revoked and the DOE also took legal action against 881 individuals by reporting them to the police.

While few cases involve human trafficking, where people are made to believe they will be doing one job and end up doing another, Wirawan said she had received complaints from workers wanting to leave.

"Many people know what they are getting into but because of financial needs, they chose the risky route," she said.

"In recent years, many women and LGBT+ people go to work at erotic massage parlours and end up not liking the working conditions."

Reena Tadee, a senior researcher at Mahidol University's Institute for Population and Social Research, said cracking down on agents was not enough to tackle the problem.

"As long as there is demand for agents, they will come up with new methods of taking advantage of job seekers," said Reena, who conducted research on Thais working in South Korea.

"People seeking jobs overseas have many limitations that lead them to depend on agents in the first place, and these restrictions should be eased."

($1 = 31.8800 baht) (Reporting by Nanchanok Wongsamuth @nanchanokw; Editing by Claire Cozens. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers the lives of people around the world who struggle to live freely or fairly. Visit http://news.trust.org)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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