A human rights group claims that two labour
recruitment companies in Cambodia had sent 24 domestic workers to Malaysia.
PHNOM PENH: A Cambodian human
rights group said two labour recruitment companies sent at least 25 domestic
workers to Malaysia early today, apparently breaching a ban signed over the
weekend by Prime Minister Hun Sen.
Mathieu
Pellerin, a consultant with the rights group LICADHO, said he had spoken with
groups totalling 25 women at the Phnom Penh airport, adding that recruitment
agents from the companies had confirmed their destination and work.
“It is
shocking and very disappointing to see what these two companies have done,”
Pellerin said. “The ban is very clear: a suspension on recruitment and on
sending domestic workers.”
Hun Sen
signed an order on Saturday that suspended sending maids to Malaysia after
numerous reports of abuses. An estimated 15 percent of Malaysia’s 320,000
domestic workers are Cambodian.
Senior
officials from the Labour Ministry were not available to comment, but Phay
Siphan, a spokesman for the Council of Ministers, confirmed Hun Sen’s order was
in effect.
LICADHO,
which is the French acronym for the Cambodian League for the Promotion and
Defence of Human Rights, said seven of the women were from Top Manpower, whose
owner chairs the Association of Cambodian Recruitment Agencies, an industry
body. The other 18 were from International Investment Service Co Ltd.
LICADHO
said a staffer from Top Manpower claimed the seven women and all other trainees
at the company were exempt from the ban because they had signed contracts prior
to its enactment.
Pellerin
said the incident also raised questions about immigration officers, given that
the women were easily identifiable, wearing matching T-shirts with company
logos.
Cambodian
opposition parliamentarians have this year highlighted the abuse of domestic
workers in Malaysia. Rights groups have long complained that foreign maids in
Malaysia lack protection under labour laws, and last week, a police raid freed
dozens of underage recruits at T&P Co Ltd, a Cambodian labour recruitment
firm that has since been shut down.
The ban,
which has been condemned by maid placement agencies, could exacerbate
Malaysia’s ongoing labour shortage. It came on the heels of a similar ban
instituted by Indonesia two years ago.
Source : dpa
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