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Southeast Asian nations are now home to over 9 million migrant
workers, including 7 million coming from ASEAN countries, and the figure is
increasing rapidly. It requires joint efforts by the nations to ensure the
rights and legitimate interests of these labourers.
Ensuring the basic rights and interests of migrant workers is
also one of the focuses of ASEAN’s work by 2025.
Speaking at the launch ceremony, Kung Phoak, Deputy
Secretary-General of ASEAN for the ASEAN Socio-Cultural Community, said
ASEAN’s population is 625 million, including over 300 million at the working
age, with about 6% of them being migrant workers.
It poses challenges to the grouping in putting forth measures to
ensure the rights and legitimate interests of these people, he noted.
EU Ambassador to ASEAN Francisco Fontan affirmed that migrant
labour is a concern of Southeast Asia, Europe and the entire world. Labourers
want to work overseas to improve their income but many of them face a lot of
difficulties, including labour abuse and exploitation.
According to him, Vietnam can learn from experience of
neighbouring countries like Singapore and Thailand in sending workers abroad
as well as taking measures to manage and ensure the basic rights of foreign
workers in the country.
In the framework of the 31st ASEAN Summit in Manila, the
Philippines on November 14, 2017, leaders of ASEAN countries signed the ASEAN
Consensus on the Protection and Promotion of the Rights of Migrant Workers,
which aims to ensure migrant workers enjoy basic rights and interests, social
sponsorship and humanitarian treatment.
This reflects ASEAN’s efforts to build a community that looks
towards the people and takes them as its centre.
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Source: NDO