Malaysia: Bangladeshi & Nepali chicken processing factory workers allegedly threatened with deportation after raising complaints
Краткое изложение
Date Reported: 3 Сен 2023
Местонахождение: Малайзия
Компании
Ayamas Food - EmployerЗатронуто
Total individuals affected: 200
Мигранты и рабочие-иммигранты: ( Number unknown - Непал , Продукты питания и напитки , Gender not reported , Unknown migration status ) , Мигранты и рабочие-иммигранты: ( Number unknown - Бангладеш , Продукты питания и напитки , Gender not reported )Темы
Wage Theft , Occupational Health & Safety , Withholding Passports , Precarious/Unsuitable Living Conditions , Запугивание и угрозы , Ограничение свободы выражения , Access to Non-Judicial Remedy , Restricted mobilityОтвет
Response sought: Yes, by Journalist
External link to response: (Find out more)
Принятые меры: The company denies the allegations of migrant workers mistreatment. The company stated that it maintained safety procedures and manufacturing standards. The company acknowledged payment delays had occurred but linked the delays to ‘the processing time taken to secure work permits and complete employer transfers’.
Вид источника: News outlet
“Migrant workers ‘threatened with deportation after complaints’”
A migrant rights activist has alleged that more than 200 Bangladeshi and Nepali labourers working at a chicken processing factory in the Klang Valley are being threatened with deportation.
Andy Hall said the threats were made by the factory management after authorities intervened when they were alerted to poor working conditions and delayed salary payments.
“The workers were asked to gather at the canteen and told that they should not be communicating any issue outside of management,” he told FMT.
He alleged that the management demanded to know those responsible for relaying information to outsiders, and “issued threats of deportation if such communication persists”.
Hall said the Bangladeshis working at the receiving area were only recently provided with protective equipment…
…they had been exposed to unsanitary conditions…
…the labourers finally received three months’ pay after the authorities intervened, but still do not have their passports…
FMT has sought comment from the human resources ministry, the labour department, and the factory concerned.
They were then placed in a dormitory in Subang Jaya, which had only one toilet, and placed to work at a chicken processing factory.