Malaysia is one of Asia's biggest employers of foreign labour. But recently, cases of deaths, abuse and forced labour have come to light. What is going on? Who is protecting these migrant workers?
Daily Express
12 December 2006
Kota Kinabalu: Parti Keadilan Rakyat (Keadilan) Sabah said a fresh regularisation
exercise will be futile if the root of the illegal immigrant problem remains
unresolved.
The Jakarta Post
December 11, 2006
TANGERANG: Soekarno-Hatta International Airport Police detained 11 illegal
migrant workers Saturday who were heading for Malaysia through Batam island.
Business Times
By Rupa Damodaran
rupabanerji@nstp.com.my
December 11 2006
THE Malaysia-Pakistan Free Trade Agreement (FTA), which is into its final leg
of negotiations, will be the first to be concluded between two Organisation
of Islamic Conference (OIC) economies.
The Star
BY M. KRISHNAMOORTHY
Sunday December 10, 2006
KUALA LUMPUR: Starting Friday, any employer who hires a Filipino maid may have
to pay her a minimum monthly salary of RM1,430 double the old wage and
almost three times that of an Indonesian maid.
Daily Express
10 December, 2006
Kuala Lumpur: The Industrial Court has ruled that workers should be able to
use office e-mail to gossip about their bosses, and even use derogatory language,
without fear of being sacked.
The Star
Sunday December 10, 2006
PUTRAJAYA: Like most workers, civil servants too suffer from overwork as well
as household and financial problems that affect their work.
New Straits Times
09 Dec 2006
PUTRAJAYA: In the future, government agencies will be able to share biometric
information through a common software, making things like passport applications
and tracing criminals easier.
Malaysiakini.com
Dec 7, 06 12:53pm
An anti trafficking legislation is urgently needed to curb the wrongful persecution
of trafficking victims who were forced into the Malaysias sex trade.
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