'State Of Shock': Kyrgyz Migrants In Hungary Left Jobless And Desperate
Résumé
Date indiquée: 31 Mai 2024
Lieu: Hongrie
Entreprises
SK Group - Employer , Alfa Works - Recruiter , Ramay Sayakat Agency - RecruiterConcerné
Nombre total de personnes concernées: Chiffre inconnu
Travailleurs migrants et immigrés: ( Chiffre inconnu - Kirghizistan , Industries : Généralités , Gender not reported , Documented migrants ) , Travailleurs migrants et immigrés: ( Chiffre inconnu - Kirghizistan , Industries : Généralités , Gender not reported , Undocumented migrants )Enjeux
Wage Theft , Frais de recrutementRéponse
Réponse demandée : Oui, par Journalist
Lien externe vers la réponse: (En savoir plus)
Mesures prises: SK On Hungary responded to Radio Free Europe, saying is has contracts with temporary employment agencies, and that there had been no layoffs but that it had “terminated the renting of approximately 600 foreign guest workers”. It says it did not employ the workers but “rented them”, and so the concept of severance pay could not be legally interpreted from the company’s perspective. Alfa Works did not respond to the journalists’ request for comment. Ramai Sayakat Agency responded to the journalists, saying “companies go bankrupt sometimes” and that “this kind of thing happens”.
Type de source: News outlet
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has been a vocal critic of migrants coming to the European Union, but his government's own official figures show there are 120,000 migrant workers in Hungary, mostly from Ukraine, Serbia, Vietnam, and the Philippines. An RFE/RL investigation has uncovered how vulnerable some of these workers can be, in danger of losing their jobs without warning and being left without residency papers. In a recent case, more than 200 Kyrgyz lost their jobs at a factory owned by a subsidiary of South Korean conglomerate SK Group.