fredag 4 februari 2022

Thai embassies & consulates are being inundated with inquiries about the status of Thailand Pass applications. I’m afraid they do not process your applications and so cannot help you. For status updates, you need to contact testgo@consular.go.th or Phuket.thailandpass@gmail.com Thailand Pass Registration System (for air travel only) https://tp.consular.go.th/ . Richard Barrow


Thai berry pickers and Finnish justice | A long story about the plight of 26 Thai berry pickers in Finland published on BBC Thai was a sad one, but with a just ending, as the Finnish Supreme Court reached a verdict on January 2ุ6th and jailed, for one year and ten months, and fined a central Finland berry picking firm on 26 charges of human trafficking. Thai PBS World

Thai berry pickers and Finnish justice

A long story about the plight of 26 Thai berry pickers in Finland published on BBC Thai was a sad one, but with a just ending, as the Finnish Supreme Court reached a verdict on January 2ุ6th  and jailed, for one year and ten months, and fined a central Finland berry picking firm on 26 charges of human trafficking.

For ordinary Thais, the news was flabbergasting, as they normally consider Finland to be a paradise and one of the world's most liveable countries, with everything at a high standard. Clean air, great education, nice forests and no human rights violation, let alone human trafficking.

The victims were Thai berry pickers, who were forced to work 15 hours a day for little or no pay. Like many other pickers, their wages were used to repay debts back home. These are familiar stories for Thai labourers overseas.

According to Thailand's Ministry of Labour, during the fruit picking season from July to September of 2021, a total of 5,200 pickers went to Sweden and 3,000 went to Finland and sent hundreds of millions of baht back home. In 2020, 5,254 went to the two countries.

Of course, even though Scandinavian countries have the world's highest standards of human rights, norms and treatment, there have been cases of abuse and trafficking of foreign workers, especially berry pickers.

Kudos must go to both the Thai and Finnish officials who worked on the cases. This was the first time that 26 Thai workers filed complaints with the local police and succeeded in suing their employers, who abused them through maltreatment, including inhumane living conditions, which were unsanitary, unsafe, crowded and a health hazard. Their passports were also seized, which restricted their freedom of movement.

Most of the berry pickers from Thailand have been treated fairly by their employers and only a few are considered to have misbehaved and cheated.

There are two lessons to be learned from the Finnish case. First, the Thai workers must be united if they are collectively abused and raise the issue with the Thai embassy, so that the local authorities can be alerted. In most cases, abuse among the Thai workers in other countries often goes unreported or investigated. Not in this case, however. They were brave and resourceful.

Secondly, Thailand's Ministry of Labour has to be more rigorous in checking the terms and conditions offered by the companies hiring Thai pickers, especially those which have Thai associates, making sure that the Thai workers will not be cheated. Often times, the Thai officials have been reckless in dispatching pickers to work for questionable companies.

Truth be told, in Finland, wild berry picking is regulated by the so-called "everyman's right" rule. As such, any picker, foreign or local, is not protected by the labour laws. The Finns love to pick berries and forage for food in the forests. It is part of their beloved culture. Therefore, it is not easy to amend laws to provide legal protection for foreign workers doing the same thing.

Berry picking in Finland and Sweden is a very arduous job, because these berries grow in wide and open mountainous terrain. Pickers have to withstand all kinds of unpredictable circumstances, including inferior sanitation and accommodation. These days, Scandinavia wide, berries are in big demand and pricy, especially for the cosmetic and health supplement industries. They command a very high price in China and Japan.

From now on, it is hoped that the Finnish and Thai authorities will be working together to close the legal loopholes, to ensure that the recruitment system for Thai berry pickers will prevent any future attempts to traffic in humans.

By Kavi Chongkittavorn





Ministry says Covid stats are real not fake as daily total nears 10,000 – With Covid tally jumping to 9,909 cases and 22 deaths today (Feb. 4) the authorities said this is within anticipated range while denying they are juggling the figures. Thai Newsroom

Ministry says Covid stats are real not fake as daily total nears 10,000

THE PUBLIC Health Ministry said today's (Feb. 4) Covid tally of 9,909 cases and 22 deaths, with another 4,973 people who tested positive via ATK awaiting confirmation by PCR, is within the anticipated range while denying that officials are juggling the figures, Matichon newspaper said.

Dr. Kiattipoom Wongrachit, the ministry's permanent secretary, said the authorities quickly move to control the situation when clusters crop up while also pointing out that the mortality rate is 0.22 percent.

"Today there were 22 fatalities, we are trying to keep the total low, we don't want it to exceed 20 a day. Most of those who died were at risk, they were either not vaccinated or did not complete the doses.

"However when it comes to hospital beds, the situation at the moment is smooth," he said.

Regarding suspicions that Thailand is hiding data, the permanent secretary confirmed that his ministry is not juggling the figures and has always truthfully reported the numbers because they flow in electronically from across the nation.

"When the total number of cases improves, we mention it, when it deteriorates, we also mention it. For example ATK test totals are also reported," he said.

The ministry has earlier stated that today's 9,909 cases raised the cumulative confirmed total since Jan. 1 to 252,197 and since the start of the pandemic 2,475,632, Sanook.com said.

Of the new batch of cases 9,721 were domestic while 188 foreign arrivals tested positive.

The 22 fatalities raised the death toll to 22,250.

Another 7,827 patients were cured taking total recoveries since Jan. 1 to 198,415 with 86,473 still undergoing treatment.



Big drop in Covid cases forecast for mid-year. The Department of Disease Control forecasts that Covid-19 infections will significantly decline later this year, to only 200 cases per day in August. Bangkok Post

Big drop in Covid cases forecast for mid-year
A health worker administers a booster shot of Covid-19 vaccine at Fashion Island shopping mall on Ramintha Road in Bangkok on Thursday. (Photo: Varuth Hirunyatheb)
A health worker administers a booster shot of Covid-19 vaccine at Fashion Island shopping mall on Ramintha Road in Bangkok on Thursday. (Photo: Varuth Hirunyatheb)

The Department of Disease Control forecasts that Covid-19 infections will significantly decline later this year, to only 200 cases per day in August.

The department chief, Dr Opas Karnkawinpong, told a media briefing on Friday the Covid  situation should improve significantly in the middle of this year if there is no variant factor interference, especially a newly mutated SARS-CoV-2 virus strain.

Right now the rate of infection was rising in Thailand, but it would later decline under the principles of epidemiology. 

The model projected the number of daily cases would be around 4,000 per day in June, 1,000 per day in July and below 200 per day by August, he said.

As reported on Friday morning, there were 9,909 cases in the previous 24 hours with 22 deaths. This led to the department asking the public for cooperation in tightening up  preventive measures. 

Dr Opas said many factors were pushing the numbers up, especially the relaxation of  controls on dining out and the expanding number of small clusters countrywide. 

So preventive measures against the disease were still needed to control its spread. 

"Please do not be overly mindful of the figure. It is not important as long as our public health system can effectively manage the outbreak. The most important point is that we have large-scale vaccination, especially the booster dose at 21.4%," he said. 

Current measures were enough to control the situation. Many countries with more daily infections had not put in place any extra measures to control the disease. 

In addition to giving its Covid-19 forecast, the department warned people to exercise caution against other diseases that might show a resurgence this year.

The number of patients with avian influenza could hit 22,817 cases this year, up from 10,698 cases last year. Dengue fever could reach 85,000 cases, up from 9,956 last year -  the peak period expected in July with 13,769 cases predicted.