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Thailand tightens grip on undocumented foreign teachers

Thailand tightens grip on undocumented foreign teachers

BANGKOK: Thailand’s Department of Employment (DoE) launched inspections of language schools in the Ratchada and Bang Na areas of Bangkok yesterday (Feb 9) following the arrest of eight undocumented South Korean language teachers.

crimepolice
By Bangkok Post

Monday 10 February 2025 07:36 AM


Immigration police check work permits of teachers at a school in Nonthaburi, an adjacent province northwest of Bangkok, on Sept 28, 2020. Photo: Bangkok Post / File

Immigration police check work permits of teachers at a school in Nonthaburi, an adjacent province northwest of Bangkok, on Sept 28, 2020. Photo: Bangkok Post / File

DoE director-general Somchai Morakotsriwan said the department had been actively inspecting foreign labour under the “Search, Arrest, Fine, Deport” operation after receiving reports from members of the public that foreigners had been working without work permits at well-known Korean language schools in the Ratchada and Bang Na areas, reports the Bangkok Post.

The DoE’s foreign labour inspection unit together with Immigration Bureau (IB) police visited language schools in the reported areas and examined work permits of their teachers yesterday. The team did not find illegally employed foreign teachers.

The operation was to prevent a negative impact on job opportunities for Thai workers, Mr Somchai said.

On Thursday, IB police raided two branches of a language school on Ratchadaphisek Road and arrested eight South Korean nationals for working as language teachers without permits.

“Foreigners seeking a work permit for teaching positions in educational institutions must enter Thailand under a non-immigrant visa and submit their applications along with relevant teaching qualifications and other required documents at one of the Bangkok Employment Office Area 1-10 or at the Provincial Employment Office where their school is located,” Mr Somchai said.

Foreign teachers found working without a valid work permit will face a fine of B5,000 to B50,000 and deportation. Any school found to have employed undocumented foreign teachers will be fined B10,000 to B100,000 per person.

For repeat offences, the school’s owner is punishable by up to a year in jail and/or a bigger fine of B50,000 to B200,000 per illegally employed worker.

“Foreigners wanting to get work permits can call the Labour Ministry’s 1506 hotline and press 2 or the DoE’s 1694 hotline. We have English interpreters to provide information and advice on how to work in Thailand legally,” the DoE director-general said.