Migrants in Malaysia: Worker faces deportation after speaking up
A Malaysian company has revoked the work permit of a Bangladeshi migrant and threatened to do the same to 60 others on Thursday, a day after the workers talked to Expatriates' Welfare Adviser Prof Asif Nazrul about poor working conditions, several workers have said…
The management of Negeri Sembilan-based Mediceram, which manufactures rubber gloves, called the worker named Nahid Ibrahim and told him that his work permit would be revoked and he would be deported, they said…
Requesting anonymity, a worker of the gloves factory said, "We were shocked when we heard that Nahid would be deported and protested. Then, the management said it has a list of 60 of us who would be deported."
Nearly 200 workers then began a strike on Friday, he said, requesting not to be named for fear of backlash…
According to a letter submitted to Prof Asif on May 14, the Bangladeshis workers gave between Tk 500,000 and Tk 600,000 to a recruiting agency named Greenland for jobs in Malaysia.
"Before our flights, they forced us to say on camera that we paid only Tk 78,000," reads the letter…
However, wages have been irregular for the last two years. In some months, the company pays only half or one-third of the salary, it said…
[The article names the recruitment company 'Greenland'. The Resource Centre was not able to identify this company to invite a response to the allegations; if the company is identified in the future, this page will be updated accordingly.]