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How Malaysian Immigration Officers Ran A Massive Corruption Scam (And Got Away Scot-Free)

By now most of you already know that the Malaysian immigration system was sabotaged by the very officers working to protect it. For which, the Immigration Department has fired 15 of its officers and several others have been either suspended or redeployed.

Prior to this, earlier in April and May, Officers from the Special Branch had conducted operations in the Klang Valley area, resulting in the arrests of 19 people involved in human trafficking syndicate. Among those arrested, there were 2 Malaysian Immigration Officers, IGP Khalid had revealed to the press.

The syndicate was trafficking migrants to Geneva, Switzerland.

While the syndicate would charge as much as RM60,000 to each migrant, the two arrested Immigration Officers working for the syndicate would ensure no issues for the migrants at their counters for a mere sum of RM150 to RM350 per migrant.

Following which, security at airports was tightened in the country.

immigration_klia

An undated photo of a tourist going through the biometric procedure at the KLIA Airport.

Then on 18 May, it was also reported that there were many “loopholes” in the security screening system at our airports, which enabled the syndicate to take advantage of it.The Malay Mail Online reported that the Home Ministry was probing into it.

The Malay Mail Online quoted a ministry source as saying about Malaysia Immigration System (myIMMs), “It is believed the system may be downed deliberately, suggesting corruption. Those manning and operating the electronic screening of passengers — from the authorities to airline staff and employees of the system development company — are being investigated.”

It was the frequent “crashes” of the system that had raised serious questions about myIMMs ability to keep out would-be terrorists, people smugglers, and other criminals, the unnamed source had said, adding that the high number of ‘breakdowns’ also suggests that “many on watch lists could have gone under the radar.”

A doubt which was also raised by Deputy Home Minister Nur Jazlan Mohamad.

He had called into doubt the system’s ability to screen incoming foreigners due to its “embarrassingly” frequent glitches which allow foreigners to enter Malaysia through the Kuala Lumpur airports easily. The Star reported him saying that the security screening system, implemented by Heitech Padu for over two decades, would be upgraded.

Following which, some 100 people, including officials from the Immigration Department, were investigated by authorities and it was revealed that the Malaysian Immigration System (myIMMs) could have been compromised as far back as 2010, The ST reported

On 31 May, following the investigation by the authorities, the Immigration Department fired 15 of its officers, who were among a total of 37 officers who were given “disciplinary action” over their role in the sabotage. The disciplinary action included 14 suspensions and 8 other had their salary increments frozen.

Immigration Department Director-General Sakib Kusmi was quoted by Malaysiakini that there are grounds to believe that the officers, some of whom have been with the department for more than a decade, may be linked to a human trafficking syndicate.

They deal online. The instructions come from overseas. First, they have to access our system, then they can manipulate our system from outside. You can see this in our computers, the cursor moves, without someone operating it. These acts enabled traffickers to bypass immigration systems.

News source: Says.com, TheStar, Malay Mail, Straitstimes, MalaysiaKini

‘Datuk Seri immigration officer’ nabbed

Police arrested a 53-year-old man for impersonating an Immigration officer with the title ‘Datuk Seri’ to cheat employers of foreign workers. Dang Wangi OCPD Asst Comm Zainol Samah said the man was arrested in Jalan Bukit Bintang area at about 2pm on May 31.He said the suspect would put on a “Home Ministry jacket” and show fake Immigration Department name card carrying the name Datuk Seri Chong Kok Man.

handcuffed malaysia immigration officerHe said the suspect claimed to be able to renew working permits and would charge the employers between RM600 and RM2,000.

ACP Zainol said the suspect would meet the victims near the Putrajaya Immigration office or in Bukit Bintang to collect the money and disappear.

“We believe the suspect has been active for the past two years,” he told a press conference on Friday.

ACP Zainol said the suspect was arrested about 24 years ago for 10 similar cases and sentenced to a year in prison.

He urged the victims to lodge reports.

In a separate case, ACP Zainol said police arrested four suspects, including a woman, after a Bangladesh national was robbed.

He said the victim was walking along Jalan Silang at about 10am on May 31 when four suspects approached him.

One of the suspects held the victim by his shirt and the others took RM500 and his handphone from his pockets.

ACP Zainol said after receiving a report from the victim, police managed to arrest the four suspects, aged in their 20s and 30s, some 45 minutes later in Pasar Seni.

He said the suspects have previous criminal records for robberies and drugs.

Source: TheStar

No Lift On Ban On Foreign Workers In Malaysia Until Employers Stop Using Agents

The government will not lift the blanket ban on the intake of foreign workers until it is convinced that employers will stop using agents and take full responsibility over the welfare of their workers.

Nur JazlanDeputy Home Minister Datuk Nur Jazlan Mohamed said industry players especially those in the Small Medium Enterprises (SME) prefer using agents to hire workers in order to escape from being held accountable for their welfare.

“The blanket ban will not be lifted until employers especially the SMEs change their attitude.

“They are asking for more foreign workers to be allowed into the country despite the current numbers that we have, but they refuse to take responsibility over the welfare of their workers.

“So the ban will remain until we are convinced that they have stopped using agents’ services,” he said in a talk held at the International University and College (Inti) today.

Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi on March 12 announced that the government had decided to stop the recruitment of new foreign workers including the initial plan of bringing in 1.5 million Bangladeshi workers.

Following the temporary freeze, sectors that are heavily dependent on foreign workers such as manufacturing complained that they did not have enough workers to continue their operations.

News source: NST Online

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Malaysia Foreign Workers Supply

Enquiry Form For Malaysia Foreign Workers Supply
  • Tell us which industry are you from?
  • Please stated what kind of products & services you are dealing with. ie Manufacturing - Food.
  • If you are a foreign workers, tell us which country are you from.
    If you are Malaysian employers, please stated your workers' country origin.
  • What is your current no. of workers in your company
  • How many new workers you intend to hire
  • Please write down the requirements, issue and problem (if any) you encountered and would like to seek professional opinions from us.
    Tell us how do you found us and our website.
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Case For A Higher Minimum Wage For Malaysia Foreign Workers From 1 July 2016

As of July 1, the new minimum wage rate will come into effect. In Peninsular Malaysia, minimum wage will be RM1,000 or RM4.81 per hour. In Sabah, Sarawak and Labuan, minimum wage will be RM920 or RM4.42 per hour.

A minimum wage policy is always resisted by employers and it is no different in this country. It took quite some time before employers would meet their obligation when a minimum wage was introduced.

As of July 1, the new minimum wage rate will come into effect. In Peninsular Malaysia, a hike of RM100 takes it to RM1,000 or RM4.81 per hour. In Sabah, Sarawak and Labuan, the increase is RM120, taking the minimum wage to RM920 or RM4.42 per hour, definitely not a king’s ransom, but still disputed by bosses. They argue that increased cost of production is not tolerable given a weakening economy. To add insult to injury, they threaten to pass the cost on to consumers. It is important to remember that the minimum wage is about providing every worker a living wage and, as the government states, it is for all, including foreign workers. This is a very important provision because if employers consider it too high, then they will be more circumspect about importing labour.

As a result, to continue production, manufacturers, for example, will need to mechanise further. The upgrading of technology is part of the transformation exercise to modernise the economy. Thus far, because salary for migrant labour is kept depressed, manufacturers opt for labour intensive operations. The minimum wage law then makes them, when technology promises to increase productivity.

malaysia-foreign-workers-minimum-wages-2Meanwhile, it will also end the use of unskilled labour, helping the government’s upskilling effort. Indeed, if employers carry through their threat of passing the increased cost of production to consumers, theoretically, it is justifiable, as long as there is no profiteering. Ultimately, it is up to the consumer to buy or not to buy. And, when the money goes towards the salaries of those doing 3D jobs (dangerous, dirty and difficult), it will, in the end, make these jobs attractive enough for Malaysians who go abroad as 3D workers, because the pay is much better.

This is another facet of minimum wage; although it must be said that paying workers doing 3D jobs dirt money is not acceptable. As the New York City sanitation workers strike in 1968 demonstrated, this “dirty” job is indispensable to public health and general cleanliness. At the end of the strike, some 100,000 tonnes of trash were uncollected from the streets. The New York Times had said the city looked like “a vast slum”. When 3D workers withhold their labour, the community is in trouble.

Naturally, minimum wage aims to raise the standard of living of low-paid Malaysians. It is an exercise in wealth redistribution, a concomitant arrangement of the social contract because a public policy that marginalises low-paid workers is one that invites trouble. Malaysia has been very fortunate that gaps are filled by migrant workers. However, as the shortage of Indonesian domestic help demonstrates, when countries of origin modernise, and employment opportunities increase, they will stop coming.

If Malaysians are unwilling to prepare for this eventuality through production technology upgrades, accompanied by ups killing and minimum wages that accommodate the cost of living comfortably, the shock, then, is inevitable and the economic disruption terrible. Minimum wage, hence, is a vital facet of the country’s economic transformation.

News source: NST Online

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Malaysia Foreign Workers Supply

Enquiry Form For Malaysia Foreign Workers Supply
  • Tell us which industry are you from?
  • Please stated what kind of products & services you are dealing with. ie Manufacturing - Food.
  • If you are a foreign workers, tell us which country are you from.
    If you are Malaysian employers, please stated your workers' country origin.
  • What is your current no. of workers in your company
  • How many new workers you intend to hire
  • Please write down the requirements, issue and problem (if any) you encountered and would like to seek professional opinions from us.
    Tell us how do you found us and our website.
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Introduction of Application Charges For Skilled Expatriate Employment Pass And Related Applications

malaysia-expatriate-visa

To better facilitate employers meet their needs for skilled expatriate talent, we have put in place a robust online data platform and service-driven process which have helped the centre, which is conveniently located in the Klang Valley, to efficiently process employment pass applications for skilled expatriates within its five-day (5) client charter. Since June 2015, we have worked hard to improve the processing time and have approved more than 74% of Employment Pass applications within this client charter.

In our continuous effort to enhance our facilities and provide improved service in processing skilled expatriate Employment Pass (DP10) on a sustainable basis, we would like to advise that MYXpats Centre will be introducing application charges for all skilled expatriate employment pass and related applications submitted through ESD Online.

Effective 1 June 2016, all new and renewal applications for the Employment Pass (EP), Dependant Pass (DP), and Social Visit Pass (SVP) will be subject to the following application charges:

Type of pass Application charges per application (Ringgit Malaysia) GST (Ringgit Malaysia)
Employment Pass RM 300.00 RM 18.00
Dependant Pass RM 70.00 RM 4.20
Social Visit Pass (SVP) RM 70.00 RM 4.20

(NOTE: The amount stated are solely for the skilled expatriate talent application charges and exclude Immigration fees)

In line with the Government’s plan to create leaner and more efficient public services, payment for these application charges can be made online via credit card or internet banking at any time of the day. For more information on the application charges and payment methods, please refer to our Frequently Asked Questions on the Immigration Department’s Expatriate Services Division (ESD) website.

News Source: ESD Website

 

Four Sectors Malaysian Company Allowed To Hire Foreign Workers

The Malaysia Cabinet is lifting the freeze on hiring foreign workers for four sectors, says Transport Minister Datuk Seri Liow Tiong Lai. The decision was made in light of appeals from the manufacturing, construction, plantation and furniture-making industries, which are facing a major shortage of workers.

unfreeze_on_malaysia_foreign_workers_intake“In view of the acute shortage, we have to lift the suspension to allow these sectors to bring in foreign workers,” said Liow.

However, he said that the Cabinet was already looking to improve the system for hiring foreign workers, after which they would gradually lift the hiring freeze for other sectors too.

“On other sectors, we will go on a case-by-case basis, while waiting for the creation of a more foolproof, transparent and accountable system,” he added.

“Workers are important for the productivity of these sectors, so if employers face too many uncertainties in hiring workers, that will not go well for the nation’s economic growth,” he said.

Liow added that it would take time for the Government to engage with the various industries to better understand the situations that each sector faced.

However, he emphasised that it was important for the Government to regulate and have proper control over the hiring of foreign workers in Malaysia.

The Star reported recently that a survey by the Federation of Malaysian Manufacturers showed that 84% of manufacturers were facing a labour shortage, with half of them claiming that they had not been able to fulfil existing orders.

The survey showed 146 companies required 13,270 new workers this year to meet their business needs and replace unfit or returning workers.

Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Seri Dr Wee Ka Siong said the illegal foreign workers’ rehiring programme must be made more efficient to assist manufacturers, who were facing a manpower shortage due to the freeze on foreign workers since February.

Only 55,000 illegals have been rehired so far, out of the estimated 1.4 million said to be in the country.

Late last month, Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi said that a decision on the freeze on foreign labour would be announced soon.

News source: TheStar

Do you facing manpower shortage problem? We are an established manpower recruitment agency located in Kuala Lumpur and can help you to solve your issuing in hiring. Fill up the form below and we will contact you shortly.

Malaysia Foreign Workers Supply

Enquiry Form For Malaysia Foreign Workers Supply
  • Tell us which industry are you from?
  • Please stated what kind of products & services you are dealing with. ie Manufacturing - Food.
  • If you are a foreign workers, tell us which country are you from.
    If you are Malaysian employers, please stated your workers' country origin.
  • What is your current no. of workers in your company
  • How many new workers you intend to hire
  • Please write down the requirements, issue and problem (if any) you encountered and would like to seek professional opinions from us.
    Tell us how do you found us and our website.
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廖中莱:将拟更完善机制,3领域优先聘新外劳

马华总会长拿督斯里廖中莱披露,政府冻结引进外劳政策即将解冻,届时家具业制造业、农业将优先获批相关聘请外劳申请。他说,内阁未来也会就外劳的管制课题,拟订更完善的新机制。

廖中莱

马华总会长拿督斯里廖中莱披露,政府冻结引进外劳政策即将解冻,届时家具业、制造业、农业将优先获批相关聘请外劳申请。

他透露,自政府冻结引进外劳,华社不少领域包括马来西亚中华总商会(中总)、家具公会、农业界组织等,向马华反映该政策带来深远影响。

他说,许多厂商受累,因劳动力的缺乏,饱受“有订单出不到货”问题的困扰。

也是交通部长的廖中莱指出,他与担任首相署部长的马华署理会长拿督斯里魏家祥博士等人在最近两次的内阁会议,将问题带到内阁会议讨论,希望问题尽快给予解决,而政府也能提出更好的机制。

他说,直至上周内阁会议,终同意解冻有关冻结引进外劳政策,并优先开放家具业、制造业、农业的劳力需求。

他表示,国内有逾百万名非法外劳,政府对此非常担忧,未来将推出更全面的机制来管制外劳。

廖中莱今午出席在古来举行的一场马华扩大代表制全国巡回汇报会后,在记者会上受询时如是透露。出席者包括马华副总秘书拿督黄日昇、马华柔州联委会秘书谢松清等人。

魏家祥补充,大马国内许多厂商涉及出口生意,需外劳给予投入商品的生产运作,冻结引进外劳,影响国内经济及带来企业的资金问题。

新闻来源: 马华新闻中心

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Malaysia Foreign Workers Supply

Enquiry Form For Malaysia Foreign Workers Supply
  • Tell us which industry are you from?
  • Please stated what kind of products & services you are dealing with. ie Manufacturing - Food.
  • If you are a foreign workers, tell us which country are you from.
    If you are Malaysian employers, please stated your workers' country origin.
  • What is your current no. of workers in your company
  • How many new workers you intend to hire
  • Please write down the requirements, issue and problem (if any) you encountered and would like to seek professional opinions from us.
    Tell us how do you found us and our website.
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Reducing Reliance On Malaysia Foreign Workers

The freeze on the hiring of foreign workers from February reveals how reliant Malaysia’s economy is on low-wage labour for growth. More engagement needed with industry to avoid labour shortage in certain sectors.

A rough calculation by Malaysian Palm Oil Association chief executive Datuk Makhdzir Mardan showed that in 2013, when the plantation industry had a shortage of 23,500 workers, the opportunity cost came to RM1.6bil. He points out that in 2013, one foreign worker who works as a harvester equalled RM500,000 in productivity.

While the over-arching industrial policy is to produce higher value-added goods and services, the truth is that large segments of the economy is still very much dependent on low-wage labour, particularly of the low-skilled foreign migrant-worker kind.

Migrant workers Manik and Mohammad Delowar, both 27 years old from Bangladesh, are two such workers working on the multibillion ringgit Sungei Buloh-Kajang MRT line. Manik has lived in Malaysia for the last eight years and has worked on three property projects before being employed to work on the MRT project.

Both earn a salary of between RM1,500 and RM1,600 per month, 75% of which is remitted home to support their families. Manik told StarBiz that the freeze, which came about after a public outcry over an agreement between the governments of Bangladesh and Malaysia to supply low-skilled workers, would definitely affect the flow of workers that wanted to work in Malaysia.

“I do not wish to go back to my country as I’ll not be able to find a job there,” he said, adding that unemployment in Bangladesh was high and he had to support a family of six.

Manik paid RM8,000 to an agent and waited a year before securing a job in Malaysia. He sold land and borrowed money in order to pay for the fees. Mohammad, who has been working in Malaysia for eight months, paid RM12,000 in fees.

Their experience tell the often unheard human story of foreign workers in Malaysia. These millions of workers who come from the most part from Bangladesh, Indonesia, Myanmar, Nepal, the Philippines and Vietnam are familiar faces in various sectors of the economy. The construction and agriculture sectors cannot do without them while the services sector, especially the hospitality, food and beverage and security industries, have large numbers of foreign workers.

Although the low-cost model of growth has served Malaysia well in the 1980s and 1990s, it has also made local firms reluctant to adopt technology or more efficient ways of doing things. Malaysia’s membership of the Trans Pacific Partnership makes higher productivity and efficiency ever more urgent.

Economists argue that without a rise in productivity, measured in the production of higher value-added goods and services, wages will continue to be low. The large number of foreign workers with their lower skill sets and low wages makes things worse.

This is not to say that there are no higher value-added goods or services being produced, or that the Government is not encouraging it. The New Economic Model, together with the National Key Economic Areas, have identified various sectors and subsectors in which Malaysia can have a competitive advantage.

Leadership, clear-cut policy on foreign workers and investment in education as well as technology are just some of the issues that come into play as the country strives to reduce its reliance on low-wage workers and move up the value chain.

Master Builders Association Malaysia president Matthew Tee and Makhdzir agree that the adoption of technology and mechanisation will reduce dependence on foreign workers.

Tee said the Government should provide more incentives for construction firms to adopt more efficient processes such as the industrialised building system (IBS) that could reduce dependence on low-skilled migrant workers. He pointed out that reducing the import duties on construction machinery could also help.

Meanwhile, Makhdzir said more funds should be allocated to oil-palm research and development (R&D) to make the industry more competitive. “If we desperately need to make that progress, we need to put in more talent, and more money to make it competitive in terms of R&D,” he added.

Makhdzir said the policy needed to be more flexible where R&D was concerned as talent must be sourced from outside the country if necessary.

But in the meantime, the freeze on foreign workers is causing a lot of problems as news headlines in recent months show. The problem is particularly acute in the construction and agriculture sectors.

Tee said there was a shortage of 1.3 million workers in the construction sector and predicted a shortage of up to 2 million by 2020. “This will cause delay in projects which could result in liquidated damages by clients translating to thousands of ringgit per day,” he adds.

Tee observed that the government-initiated rehiring programme that in part would also legalise illegal foreign workers had only attracted 3% of the 1.7 million total number of illegal workers in the country. He said the requirements to legalise the workers were inflexible and because of that, many did not fit the requirements – one reason why the overwhelming majority had decided not to get properly documented.

He said firms wishing to hire workers under the rehiring programme found it more expensive than hiring fresh foreign workers. On the other hand, Makhzir said there needed to be leadership in tackling the issue while Tee said there needed to be more engagement with industry as the reaction from the authorities had been slow.

News source: The Star

Do you facing manpower shortage problem? We are an established manpower recruitment agency located in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia and can help you to solve your issuing in hiring. Fill up the form below and we will contact you shortly.

Malaysia Foreign Workers Supply

Enquiry Form For Malaysia Foreign Workers Supply
  • Tell us which industry are you from?
  • Please stated what kind of products & services you are dealing with. ie Manufacturing - Food.
  • If you are a foreign workers, tell us which country are you from.
    If you are Malaysian employers, please stated your workers' country origin.
  • What is your current no. of workers in your company
  • How many new workers you intend to hire
  • Please write down the requirements, issue and problem (if any) you encountered and would like to seek professional opinions from us.
    Tell us how do you found us and our website.
  • Please let us know the convenience time to contact you to discuss further.

 

引进外劳非长远计政府聚焦重聘计划

尽管近日来有指政府或在近期公佈解除禁止引进外劳政策,但內政部副部长拿督诺嘉兹兰表示,当局现阶段將会持续把焦点放到重新聘请外劳计划上,之后才会进一步决定是否解冻引进外劳政策。 大马僱主联合会(MEF)执行董事拿督三苏丁也指出,一旦政府打算改变全面冻结引进所有国家外劳的立场,最早也只会在今年6月30日,即有关重新聘请外劳计划期限到后,才会有所公佈,意味著业者仍需等待长达2个月。

malaysia foreign worker

我国外劳政策不完善常引非议,政府冻结引进外劳政策,被指令国內多个经济领域缺乏人力,影响生產。

诺嘉兹兰接受《东方日报》访问时说,在我国早前的外劳政策下,国內雇主並没有履行其积极培训本地职员的责任,反之一直依赖於从国外引进外劳便利政策,惟这並非长远方案。

他说,这是因为对许多来自印尼、尼泊尔以及越南等国家外劳而言,在我国雇主在所提供给外劳薪酬方面,大马已不再是一个让他们感到具吸引力的国家。

只能吸引素质低外劳

「我国目前只能吸引那些只需要低技能或素质较低的外劳前来,即在那些低技能和缺乏竞爭力的领域工作,这並无法让国內各领域达到提升。」

「我们仍会继续考虑来自各领域业者的意见,但在决定是否解冻引进外劳前,我们將会持续重新聘请外劳计划。」

诺嘉兹兰今日针对內政部会否在近期宣布重新允准国內各领域引进外劳一事,这么回应。

另一方面,三苏丁表示,儘管近期报导陆续指政府或在近期公佈解冻外劳,惟该联合会至今仍受到任何来自內政部的正式信函,而该组织也会继续跟进此事。

最早6月30日公佈

他相信,政府解冻並重新允准国內各领域引进外劳的政策,最早也只会在今年6月30日,即有关重新聘请外劳计划期限到后,才会有所公佈。

他说,鑑於全面引进冻结政策而引发的人手短缺问题,许多需要庞大人手的製造业和种植业等领域业者近期深受打击,因无法在限定期限內完成生產而面临亏损,政府理应儘速釐清此事。

「据了解,雇主及外劳本身对重新聘请外劳计划的反应並不是那么鼓舞,因为这等於雇主向当局承认聘请非法外劳的罪行,並需因此而缴付罚款。」

他指出,虽然全马共有220万非法或持有证件但逾期的外劳,必须在该计划下登记,但是至今也只有6万名外劳向该局登记。」

「相比起通过该计划来聘请外劳来解决,业者还是希望能够直接引进外劳,我们是希望政府能够若宣布解冻禁止引进外劳的政策,必须让其全面在各领域生效,而並非分阶段或仅根据特定领域需求来落实。」

雇主或减產应对劳工短缺

大马中华总商会(中总)总秘书拿督卢成全指出,若政府打算在「重新聘请外劳计划」於今年6月杪结束后,才宣布解冻引进外劳政策,雇主或需在这2个月通过延长现有外劳加班时段、將所接获订单外包予其他公司完成生產,甚至是减產来应对严重人手短缺问题。

他表示,自政府於今年2月19日宣布全面冻结引进外劳以来,多个领域企业尤其是製造业、家具业、建筑业以及种植业等皆面临严重人手短缺问题,许多业者更无法在客户在订单所限定的期限內,完成生產及交货。

他说,为了应对这些因外劳人手短缺而因引发的问题,一些雇主最终只能要求现有的外劳职员延长加班时段,或把部分订单外包予其他公司来完成生產,以便能够在定期內交货给客户。

卢成全指出,若还需再多等2个月,才能重新引进外劳,那么雇主的应对政策包括延长外劳加班时段、將订单外包给其他公司以及拒接一些订单等。

他表示,在许多领域,所有外劳刚入行就说明,他们每日或许加班2至3个小时,如今或许再延长加班时段,包括在週末也需工作等。」

「如以家具业领域而言,一旦业者无法依据订单所限定期限完成出口生產就需缴付罚款予买家,即拖延交货1天需罚100美元(约391令吉),为了不要让国外进口商对公司持有迟交货的负面印象,许多商家只好將订单外包。」

卢成全今日接受《东方日报》访问时,如此表示。他说,相比起製造业厂商,农產业及种植业领域因外劳人手短缺问题所面临的衝击更大,因为这些领域业者无法有效预知收割成果而有效调动人手和聘请外劳。

他举例,当一些种植业者在进入丰收季节时,却因因外劳人手不充足无法顺利完成收割,导致其农產品最终损坏,为了减少类似亏损,业者只好选择减產。

新闻来源: 东方网

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Malaysia Cabinet Will Review Foreign Labour Issues Faced By Companies

The Cabinet today decided to look into critical foreign labour needs faced by foreign and local companies in Malaysia, said International Trade and Industry Minister Datuk Seri Mustapa Mohamed.

datuk_seri_mustapa_mohamed

International Trade and Industry Minister Datuk Seri Mustapa Mohamed checking out the Coca-cola Bottlers (Malaysia) Sdn Bhd’s New Production Line at the Taman Perindustrian Halal in Nilai

He said in this matter, the Malaysian Investment Development Authority (MIDA) with other agencies including the Immigration Department and Human Resource Ministry will work closely to identify the critical needs.

“As for critical areas, the government has a policy which allows some foreign companies to continue employing new foreign workers.

“…but going foward, our policy is to encourage more Malaysians to be employed by foreign and local companies,” he told a press conference after officiating Coca-cola Bottlers (Malaysia) Sdn Bhd’s New Production Line here today.

Mustapha said as for now, the government’s policy was to legalise illegal workers under the Rehiring Programme.

“Yes, we do need foreign workers but our policy going forward is to legalise illegal workers… there are about two million illegal foreign workers in this country and at least one million illegal foreign workers needed to be legalised,” he added.

In February, Deputy Prime Minister Ahmad Zahid Hamidi announced a freeze on the intake of foreign workers, ncluding those from Bangladesh

News source: The Sun Daily

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  • If you are a foreign workers, tell us which country are you from.
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