# manifestorakyat2021
2g2: Migrant Workers
Preamble
The contentious handling of migrant labour issues is a long-standing problem.
Malaysia has for decades relied on migrant workers as a source of cheap and
pliant labour. Conservative estimates put them at approximately 15% of the
labour force in 2019. Of these, 40% are irregular or undocumented, according to
a 2020 World Bank report. One reason for this is the decades-long arbitrary
management of migrants and entrenched corrupt practices in the labour
recruitment system. Despite clear wrongdoings by the authorities, migrants
continue to be blamed and made the scapegoats for irregular migration. In the
past two years alone, US customs authorities have banned imports of certain
Malaysian products following allegations of forced labour. Migrant rights activists
have also highlighted the plight of migrant workers being overworked or given
excessive overtime work, living in cramped and unhygienic conditions and being
subjected to sexual harassment, among other human rights abuses. These
warnings underscore an urgent need to manage our migrant labour force
according to international standards.
Unfortunately, the current legislation, specifically the Anti-Trafficking In Persons
and Anti-Smuggling of Migrants, is inadequate in protecting migrants from falling
into the trap of forced labour and modern-day slavery.
(Firdaus Husni, MCCHR, Proposal 2G2-1)
I: Comprehensive Policy for Migrant Workers
The key issues pertaining to migrant workers are recruitment, debt bondage,
arrest and detention, poor working and housing conditions, inadequate access to
health treatment, sexual harassment and lack of access to redress mechanisms
and unregulated domestic work. All these have resulted in forced labour and
trafficking-in-persons situations, torture and deaths of migrant workers.
1. Make public the report of the Special Independent Committee on
Foreign Worker Management.
(Adrian Pereira, North-South Initiative, Proposal 2G2-2)
In 2018, the Pakatan Harapan Cabinet commissioned a transparent Special
Independent Committee on Foreign Worker Management to study the problems
of migrant workers, and come up with recommendations to address the issue.
Although the report was completed and presented to the Cabinet for
deliberation, it was not publicly released, and to the best of public knowledge,
none of the proposals have been implemented to date. The current government
should accept its responsibility in improving the lives of migrant workers, and an
immediate step is to release this report as the basis of a comprehensive policy to
come.
2. Cease ad hoc policies.
(Adrian Pereira, North-South Initiative, Proposal 2G2-2)
Ad hoc policies have only given rise to more corruption while neither addressing
migrant workers’ woes in a systematic manner nor providing long-term solutions
to the problems.
3. Establish effective procedures under the Ministry of Human Resources
to manage migrant workers.
i. The Ministry of Human Resources should be tasked with the
responsibility of managing migrant workers, starting with setting up one-
stop centres for them.
(Adrian Pereira, North-South Initiative, Proposal 2G2-2)
ii. Separate labour and immigration issues, and allow migrant workers the
same access to justice enjoyed by all Malaysian workers as mandated by
the Manpower Department of the Ministry of Human Resources.
iii. Set up an oversight consultation body consisting of government, private
sector, trade unions, non-governmental organisations and migrant
leaders to monitor and improve the system.
4. Stop arbitrary arrest and detention of undocumented migrants.
i. Decriminalise and settle work permit issues, including any deportation of
migrant workers, according to human rights standards.
ii. Immediately cease the harsh treatment of migrant workers in
overcrowded detention centres and other methods of torture.
iii. Study, test and implement alternatives to detention.
5. Facilitate access to justice for migrant workers who file complaints
against their employers.
i. Allow migrant workers’ work permits to be cancelled immediately after
they have filed cases against their employers with the relevant
departments. These workers should be issued special permits at
minimum cost so that they can continue to work while their case is being
addressed.
ii. No migrant must face justice without representation. The National Legal
Aid Foundation must allocate a quota for foreign nationals to access
quality and effective legal aid services.
6. Grant migrant workers universal healthcare.
All migrant workers should have access to universal healthcare.
(Adrian Pereira, North-South Initiative, Proposal 2G2-2)
The healthcare system must not have a separate discriminatory costing tier for
migrant healthcare. The levies that migrant workers pay should go towards
paying for subsidised healthcare. Most migrant workers earn around the
minimum wage, currently RM1,200, a sum which largely constrains their ability to
save and spend on healthcare treatment.
7. Give migrant workers the right to decent work in accordance with
Malaysia's labour laws.
Migrant workers should be given the freedom to exercise their rights related to
labour matters, which includes collective bargaining with employers via forming
and leading unions of their own sector or labour interest.
8. Amend laws to strengthen action against forced labour and modern-day
slavery.
i. Criminalise forced labour or modern slavery independent of anti-
trafficking laws.
ii. Ensure Malaysian laws also cover modern forms of exploitation, such as
psychological coercion, deception, fraud and abuse of vulnerabilities.
iii. Increase sanctions for forced labour, modern slavery, human trafficking
and smuggling of migrants.
iv. Hold corporations and supply chains accountable for any practices that
support human trafficking and modern slavery.
(Firdaus Husni, MCCHR, Proposal 2G2-1)
9. Ratify all basic conventions on migrant work and workers by the ILO
and the UN.
i. It is especially urgent to ratify ILO Convention 189, which pertains to
the rights of domestic workers, a grossly under-regulated sector in
Malaysia.
ii. Ensure integration of the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular
Migration into national policies, laws, regulations and enforcement.
(Adrian Pereira, North-South Initiative, Proposal 2G2-2)
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For a better and fairer electoral system and to eliminate cronyism, corruption and
Index | First Name | Last Name | Organisation | Submission Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Chee Han | Lim | Agora Society | 17/10/2022 |
1 | Swee Lin | Loh | Individual | 28/09/2022 |
2 | Laura Sui San | Kho | Mental Health Association of Sarawak (MHAS) | 28/06/2022 |
1 | Laura Sui San | Kho | Mental Health Association of Sarawak (MHAS) | 28/06/2022 |
1 | Laura Sui San | Kho | Mental Health Association of Sarawak (MHAS) | 28/06/2022 |
1 | Laura Sui San | Kho | Mental Health Association of Sarawak (MHAS) | 28/06/2022 |
1 | Laura Sui San | Kho | Mental Health Association of Sarawak (MHAS) | 28/06/2022 |
1 | Mohd Asraf Sharafi | Mohd Azhar | Individual | 25/06/2022 |
1 | Chee Han | Lim | CSO Health Cluster / People's Health Forum | 14/06/2022 |