Migrant workers in Malaysia seek unpaid wages from a supplier to Japanese companies

Migrant Workers News

Migrant workers in Malaysia seek unpaid wages from a supplier to Japanese companies
LaborBangladeshMalaysia

Around 280 Bangladeshi migrant workers are demanding unpaid wages from a Malaysian firm which was a supplier to big Japanese companies. The company shut down last year after withholding the workers' salaries for months. They have received only a fraction of the back wages that a labor tribunal ordered the plastic parts supplier to pay.

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How to improve your attention spanSenate advances legislation to regulate stablecoins, a form of cryptocurrencyMarkers in blood and urine may reveal how much ultraprocessed food we are eatingWith fewer ordinations, seminaries find ways to serve young professionals in other fieldsAP Explica: Bolivia va a los comicios más polarizados sin Evo Morales y en la peor crisis en 40 añosAround 280 Bangladeshi migrant workers in Malaysia are demanding hundreds of thousands of dollars in back wages and other money owed to them after their former employer, a plastic parts supplier to big Japanese companies, closed down. Bangladeshi migrant worker Mohosin, 38, speaks during an interview with the Associated Press at a dormitory in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. A Bangladeshi migrant worker plays on his phone at a dormitory in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. Bangladeshi migrant workers cross a road as they head to s mosque in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. .Bangladeshi migrant worker Mohosin, 38, centre, offers prayers at a mosque in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. .A Bangladeshi migrant worker watches Bangladeshi news on his phoneat a dormitory in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. .A Bangladeshi migrant worker takes a shower at his dormitory in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. .Bangladeshi migrant workers play on their phone at a dormitory in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. A uniform used by a migrant worker at Kawaguchi Manufacturing is seen hanging in a dormitory in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. A bicycle passes in front of a Kawaguchi Manufacturing factory in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. Around 280 Bangladeshi migrant workers in Malaysia are demanding hundreds of thousands of dollars in back wages and other money owed to them after their former employer, a plastic parts supplier to big Japanese companies, closed down. Bangladeshi migrant worker Mohosin, 38, speaks during an interview with the Associated Press at a dormitory in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. Bangladeshi migrant worker Mohosin, 38, speaks during an interview with the Associated Press at a dormitory in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. A Bangladeshi migrant worker plays on his phone at a dormitory in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. A Bangladeshi migrant worker plays on his phone at a dormitory in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. Bangladeshi migrant workers cross a road as they head to s mosque in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. .Bangladeshi migrant workers cross a road as they head to s mosque in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. .Bangladeshi migrant worker Mohosin, 38, centre, offers prayers at a mosque in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. .Bangladeshi migrant worker Mohosin, 38, centre, offers prayers at a mosque in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. .A Bangladeshi migrant worker watches Bangladeshi news on his phoneat a dormitory in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. .A Bangladeshi migrant worker watches Bangladeshi news on his phoneat a dormitory in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. .A Bangladeshi migrant worker takes a shower at his dormitory in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. .A Bangladeshi migrant worker takes a shower at his dormitory in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. .Bangladeshi migrant workers play on their phone at a dormitory in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. Bangladeshi migrant workers play on their phone at a dormitory in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. A uniform used by a migrant worker at Kawaguchi Manufacturing is seen hanging in a dormitory in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. A uniform used by a migrant worker at Kawaguchi Manufacturing is seen hanging in a dormitory in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. A bicycle passes in front of a Kawaguchi Manufacturing factory in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. A bicycle passes in front of a Kawaguchi Manufacturing factory in Klang, Malaysia, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025. HANOI, Vietnam — Around 280 Bangladeshi migrant workers in Malaysia are demanding hundreds of thousands of dollars in back wages and other money owed to them after their former employer, a plastic parts supplier to big Japanese companies, closed down. The workers at Kawaguchi Manufacturing’s factory in Port Klang, Malaysia’s largest port city, were left stranded when the company withheld their wages for up to eight months before shutting down late last year. The workers have filed complaints in Malaysia and back home in Bangladesh. Such disputes have become a diplomatic sore point between Bangladesh and Malaysia, drawing scrutiny on a small but powerful group of recruitment agencies and middlemen who monopolize such jobs. Asif Nazrul, an adviser to Bangladesh’s expatriate welfare ministry, met with Malaysia’s Home Minister Steven Sim Chee Keong in Kuala Lumpur last week. Officials were due to meet again Wednesday in Dhaka, the Bangladesh capital.in Bangladesh after the ouster of former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has placed a higher priority on the plight of migrant workers who often get trapped in debt after paying exorbitant recruitment fees to work in dismal conditions for little pay.Rights groups say migrant workers are dying on Saudi job sites as kingdom prepares for World CupLabor advocates say the situation is worsening as more people from across South Asia, sometimes losing their livelihoods due to climate change, seek work in Southeast Asia. Trade tensions between the U.S. and China have accelerated that trend as factories move from China to places in Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam and elsewhere.The workers have received just 251,000 ringgit of the more than 3 million ringgit in back wages that a Malaysian labor tribunal ordered Kawaguchi to pay. Many have found new jobs but still have heavy debts after borrowing money to pay hefty recruitment fees. The workers allege they were sometimes required to work without breaks for 24-hour shifts and on holidays with no paid overtime, making plastic casings for televisions and air conditioners. They say Kawaguchi confiscated their passports, provided inadequate housing and delayed their visa renewals. The factory shut down in December, soon after Sony Group and Panasonic Holdings Corp., two of Kawaguchi’s main customers, halted their orders in response to the allegations against their supplier. After the factory closed, the workers say Malaysian officials forcibly sent many of them to another city some 360 kilometers away to toil in new factory jobs without giving them any information. They were kept in filthy shipping containers converted into dormitories. Another 80 workers were told to work in palm oil plantations — but refused. Most made their way back to Port Klang to seek work and chip away at the debts that have been accumulating. It took nearly three months for them to get permission from the Malaysian government to switch jobs. The Associated Press got no response to multiple requests to Kawaguchi for comment. Malaysia’s labor department also didn’t respond to requests for comment. Md Kabir Hossain’s case is typical. The 19-year-old said he borrowed more than $4,000 to get to Malaysia from his hometown Rangpur in Bangladesh in November 2023, after his family’s textile shop began to fail. The family’s sole wage earner, he defaulted on one of his loans and wasn’t able to send money back home, as his family struggled to keep their shop going.Another worker, Parvez Azam said he didn’t know how much longer he could keep going. “If this goes on, we’ll die here,” he said.Factories in Malaysia and other countries in Southeast Asia rely on migrant workers, often from Bangladesh, Myanmar and Nepal, to fill labor-intensive jobs in manufacturing, plantations, or construction that local workers won’t perform for the wages offered. The cost of recruitment and migration from Bangladesh to Malaysia is among the most expensive in the world, according to the The official recruitment fee is about $650 per worker. But all the workers at Kawaguchi said they paid nearly $5,000. The loans they took to pay such sums has pushed them into debt bondage as they labor to pay off ever mounting debts. In 2023, Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said Malaysia should end use of recruitment agents, describing the system as “modern slavery.” But a 2024of Bangladeshi workers in Malaysia found that more than 70% had spent at least half of their wages to pay off recruitment debts. Most have at least two loans and many said they were misled about their wages. Nearly everyone who migrates overseas from Bangladesh, one of the countries most affected by climate change, has suffered at least one form of modern slavery, like withholding of wages or physical violence, according to aMohamad Mohosin, 38, said he moved to Malaysia when his crops failed because of extreme weather. After going months without being paid his debt has spiraled, forcing his large family in Bangladesh to borrow still more money. “My family is in trouble,” he said. Among migrant workers, Bangladeshis often end up in the riskiest jobs, such as plantation work where they can catch mosquito-borne diseases, or physically demanding factory or construction roles, where the likelihood of accidents is higher, said Shariful Islam Hasan of BRAC.Panasonic, Sony and Daikin, three of Kawaguchi’s former main customers among about a dozen, agreed to cover an estimated $1.3 million of the recruitment costs paid by the workers. It’s unclear how much each company is contributing. “This doesn’t cover all the workers’ costs, including interest rates of up to 30% they must pay on their loans,” said Andy Hall, a British labor activist who has been helping the workers. Many have also defaulted on their debts after going months without wages. “They’re absolutely desperate and they’re at very high risk of falling into even worse situations,” Hall said. Daikin settled with the workers, agreeing to pay them more, although it says it accounted for only 1% to 2% of Kawaguchi’s orders. The air conditioner manufacturer told AP it was working with human rights groups to resolve any remaining issues. Panasonic said it was “proportionally reimbursing the recruitment fees” paid by workers and had asked Kawaguchi to correct labor violations. It said it tried to support Kawaguchi but had to disengage from the company due to its financial woes and anticipated production problems. Sony told AP its code of conduct prohibits abusive labor practices in its supply chain. After investigating, it demanded corrective measures. “When our demands were not satisfied, we terminated our relationship with this supplier,” it said. The workers are seeking more help and lawyer Terry Collingsworth of U.S.-based International Rights Advocates, who is representing them, said that they were in discussions with Sony and Panasonic. “We are not asking you to admit liability. We are asking you to comply with your public commitment to remediate when one of your suppliers violates the human rights of its workers,” said a Jan. 16 letter from Collingsworth to Sony and Panasonic.The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.Ghosal covers the intersection of business and climate change in southeast Asia for The Associated Press. He is based out of Hanoi in Vietnam.Appeals court allows Trump’s anti-union order to take effect

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Labor Bangladesh Malaysia General News Anwar Ibrahim Jobs And Careers Compensation And Benefits Malaysia Government Associated Press International News South Asia Sheikh Hasina Bangladesh Government Terry Collingsworth Business Steven Sim Chee Keong Panasonic Holdings Corp. Kabir Hossain Sony Group Corp. Climate And Environment World News Asif Nazrul Andy Hall Climate World News

 

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