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Search Result for “illegal work”

Showing 1 - 5 of 5

THAILAND

Kabul's traffickers are in for the long haul

Spectrum, Luke Hunt, Published on 17/11/2013

» Kabul's black market for illegal travel is still doing a brisk trade despite the crackdown from Australia's newly installed government on people smuggling. However, the logistics required to circumvent the authorities and ensure a safe trip have become more complex and smugglers are under pressure to maximise profits. Fake passports, forged visas, tickets to Southeast Asia, sometimes via the Middle East, and boats to Australia and elsewhere are often available for about US$25,000 (788,000 baht) a head, more than double the costs the smugglers first charged when they began plying the Kangaroo Route in the late 1990s.

THAILAND

The great Cambodia land grab

Spectrum, Luke Hunt, Published on 19/05/2013

» Ask Sreap Samoen where are the communal grazing lands? Where can local villagers fish and grow crops? The 50-year-old woman with a weather-beaten face points into the distance and says: "It's all gone. The company has it now."

THAILAND

Ly Yong Phat, the King of Koh Kong

Spectrum, Luke Hunt, Published on 03/02/2013

» Thai-Cambodian relations have been defined high in the Dangrek Mountains ever since troops from both sides began clashing over the 12th century ruins at Preah Vihear five years ago. Further south, where the Kaoh Pao meets the Gulf of Thailand, it's a very different story.

THAILAND

The murder that shocked even Cambodia

Spectrum, Luke Hunt, Published on 06/05/2012

» In Cambodia, the murder of a high-profile environmentalist has sent shockwaves around a country which has never shaken-off its reputation for violence, corruption and a culture of impunity among the ruling political and moneyed classes.

BUSINESS

Cambodia's new corporate darling

Business, Luke Hunt, Published on 30/04/2012

» PHNOM PENH : When the Khmer Rouge were driven out of Phnom Penh in 1979 they left behind a city that had been laid bare. Its infrastructure was in ruins and utilities like the colonial-era water supply were in a state of filthy disrepair.