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Malaysian government cracks down on immigrant workers
By Terry Cook
4 February 2002
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Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamads government last month
stepped up its campaign to expel tens of thousands of immigrant
workers from Malaysia. On January 24, Assistant Deputy Prime Minister
Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi announced what he termed a temporary
halt on the recruitment of Indonesian workers by Malaysian
businesses.
Another Assistant Deputy Prime Minister, International Trade
and Industry Minister Datuk Rafidah Aziz, announced that authorities
would begin meetings with employers from factories, plantations
and construction companies to ask them to immediately prepare
themselves not to be dependent on the foreign workers.
Government leaders seized on a clash between police and 400
Indonesian textile workers employed at the Hualong Corporation
in the western state of Negri Sembilan on January 17 as a pretext
to impose the ban. New legislation was foreshadowed increasing
police powers to mete out quick punishment to guest
workers involved in crime.
The confrontation in Negri Sembilan erupted when the Hualong
employees protested against the heavy-handed tactics used by police
in detaining 16 workers, allegedly for drug abuse.
During the ensuing melee, 147 workers were arrested. Of these,
80 have been deported and the remainder are facing charges ranging
from rioting, punishable by up to two years in jail, to taking
part in an illegal assembly, which carries a six-month jail term.
All 400 workers had their work permits revoked. Those deported
were herded into trucks under the supervision of about 20 police,
including heavily armed officers from the special General Operations
Force.
Government and media outlets immediately blamed the workers
for the incident and launched a vitriolic attack on Indonesian
guest workers in general, branding them as troublemakers.
Mahathir defended the decision to impose the employment ban. A
lot of crimes they (Indonesian workers) have committed, weve
kept silent about, he claimed. But when a riot is
carried out by one group, followed by another and another, we
cannot any longer stay silent.
However, the clash in Negri Sembilan has all the hallmarks
of being deliberately provoked by the authorities. Malaysian workers
rights group Tenganita, which investigated the incident, blamed
the police who lined up workers and repeatedly hit them while
conducting urine tests. Tenganita director Irene Fernandez said:
The workers reacted and the police began to use force and
continued to beat up the workers. That was the last straw; the
seam burst and the rioting began. This assessment was supported
by Indonesian labour rights group Kopbumi, which said its investigation
showed that the incident was provoked by the police aggression.
Other so-called riots cited by Mahathir are hardly worthy of
the titlesuch as a ruckus between about 70 Indonesian workers
and stall owners on January 20 in Cyberjaya, south of Kuala Lumpuror
were the direct outcome of the governments own repressive
anti-immigrant measures. Last November, for example, 2,000 mainly
Indonesian immigrants, who were facing deportation, staged a protest
in a detention centre in Pekan Nenes, Jahor.
Late last year the government suddenly changed the official
status of thousands of legal guest workers to illegal
by replacing six-year permits with three-year permits. Workers
who had been in the country for three years, most of them working
in low-paid jobs on plantations, in manufacturing and construction,
were given just three months to leave Malaysia.
The government exploited the disturbance at the Jahor detention
centre to impose brutal measures against illegals
including the flogging of first time offenders. Immigration Department
Director Datuk Mohd Jamal Kamdi said amendments to the Immigration
Act to allow police to beat offenders with a rattan
cane would be in place by March. We have been soft for too
long, he said.
Wider crackdown
These measures are part of a broader assault on immigrant workers.
Authorities in Selangor, Malaysias most industrialised state,
have directed enforcement agencies to tear down immigrant workers
squatter housing. We have identified two Indonesian colonies
and we will be demolishing the houses next week, Ampang
Jaya Municipal Council president Ahmad Kabit said.
Authorities in all centres have instigated stringent checks
on street stall vendors to seek out overseas workers. Trader and
driver permits can be issued only to Malaysians. Hundreds of marine
police have been mobilised to carry out increased surveillance
on entry points along the waters between Malaysia and Indonesia.
Mahathirs government is preparing a campaign involving
the police, immigration officials and the military to round up
and deport 30,000 Indonesian labourers from the eastern state
of Sabah and another 10,000 from neighbouring Sarawak, on the
island of Borneo. These workers have been declared illegals,
with the government claiming that they have overstayed their work
permits.
The Immigration Department announced last month that Malaysia
had deported 124,000 illegal workers so far this financial
year, up from 103,000 last year. Our target
is 150,000, director Kamdi boasted, while Home Ministry
Secretary-General Aseh Che Mat said Kuala Lumpurs aim was
to halve the number of Indonesian workers in the country.
The mounting offensive on the rights of immigrant workers has
nothing to do with supposed criminal activity. The
government hopes to divert discontentment over the growing level
of unemployment and falling living standards by fueling anti-immigrant
sentiment.
Late last year, the government was forced to revise downwards
its economic growth forecast for a second time from 2.0 to 1.0
percent, citing the greater than expected slowdown
in the world economy. According to figures released by the Human
Resources department in November, electronic and electrical components
manufacturers across the country retrenched 37,000 workers last
year. Electrical and electronic goods comprise over 60 percent
of Malaysias exports. With almost 21 percent of all exported
goods going to America, Malaysia is highly vulnerable to the US
economic slowdown.
Layoffs are still growing, with a total of 2,482 workers sacked
from 104 companies in the first 19 days of this year. Human Resources
Minister Fong Chan said: More than 2,000 workers were retrenched
due to a drop in the demand for goods, while the closure of companies
and management reorganisation were other major reasons.
In addition, many Malaysian workers are returning home after
being retrenched in neighbouring Singapore, which is also heavily
affected by the US-led recession. Even the poor, low-paid jobs
occupied by immigrant workers are now coveted.
This is not the first time that Mahathir has attempted to make
scapegoats of immigrant workers to divert attention from his governments
failings. In 1997 the economic collapse that swept through Asia
shattered his grandiose scheme to transform Malaysia into a modern
industrial hi-tech economy.
The estimated two million legal and illegal guest
workers brought into the country in the 1980s and 1990s to provide
cheap labour for Malaysias manufacturing export industries
were no longer needed and rapidly became the target of anti-immigrant
and chauvinist attacks by the regime.
The latest decision by Malaysia to expel Indonesian guest workers
has also created a crisis in Indonesian ruling circles, prompting
both apologies and criticism from the Jakarta government. Indonesia
earns more than $500 million annually from the remittances of
millions of overseas workers.
The Indonesian government, like its Malaysian counterpart,
also has deeper concerns. It is anxious about the political ramifications
of tens of thousands of guest workers returning home to swell
the ranks of the unemployed in Indonesia, already predicted to
increase this year to 40 million, up from around 36 million in
2001.
Bomer Pasaribu, the director of the Center for Labor and Development
Studies and a former Indonesian manpower minister, warned this
week: We are already facing a super-unemployment crisis
and this will only add to the pressure that may lead to the explosion
of a social time bomb at home.
See Also:
Malaysian government uses "terrorist"
smear to bolster its political fortunes
[1 February 2002]
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