Upload
umiey-ishak
View
84
Download
0
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
DESCRIPTION
FOREIGN DOMESTIC WORKER
Citation preview
UKM Report on The Right of MDW of
Receiving Countries: Malaysia as Case Study
Prepared by:
Ma Kalthum Ishak (P67261)
Nursyuhada Matwi (P67264)
Siti Nurimani Zahari (P67267)
Supervisor:
Dr Rohaida Nordin
1
TABLE OF CONTENT
Background 2
Laws:
1) Federal Constitution 4
2) Employment Act 1955 5
3) Industrial Relations Act 1967 and Trade Unions Act 1959 7
4) Workmen’s Compensation Act 1952 9
5) Immigration Act 1959/63 10
6) National Wages Consultative Council Act 2011 10
7) Anti Trafficking Persons and Anti Smuggling of Migrants Act 1990 11
8) Worker’s Minimum Standard of Housing Amenities Act 1990 12
Memorandum of Undertsanding:
1) Indonesia 12
2) Cambodia 16
3) Bangladesh 17
Ratification of International Treaties and Conventions:
1) International Human Right Law 20
2) International Labour Rights 23
Enforcement Mechanism of MOU 25
Functions of NGO’s and Statutory Bodies in Protecting the Right of MDW: 27
1) Advocacy 28
2) Legal Representative 29
3) Campaigning 30
4) Collaborating with National and International Organization to
Enhance Protection 31
5) Providing Shelter 32
Recommendation 33
2
BACKGROUND
Employment in private households is the most common occupation for women in our region;
accounting for nearly one third of all female employment in Asia Pacific. Domestic work is also
the largest driver of labour migration in the region for women trying to escape poverty. In 2010,
under the mounting weight of globalisation led by neo-liberal demands for cheap, flexible and
transitory labour, migration pressures have increased. Despite many governments’ increasing
reliance on domestic worker remittances as a source of foreign currency, many fail to extend
domestic workers the rights and benefits other workers enjoy. A gendered notion of work that
links women with the ‘private’ sphere of the home and men with the ‘public’ sphere of paid
work and enterprise means that domestic work in amongst the lowest paid, least valued, and least
organised work in the region1.
The United Nations International Labour Organization (ILO) defines Migration as
primarily a labour issue which involves the movement of workers who cross borders to find
employment, as well as the necessity of equal treatment, good working conditions and rights for
these workers. Migrant workers can make a positive contribution to development both through
their labour in their host societies as well as through the remittances which they send home; yet
they lack labour protection at a national and international level and are thus vulnerable to
exploitation and human trafficking2. Malaysia are major receiving countries of migrant labour in
the region, and like migrant workers elsewhere, domestic workers in this country face a range of
problems. There is a clear link between Malaysia’s economic development and prosperity and
the work of migrant workers. It calls for the recognition of their role in economic growth,
regardless of their immigration status. As had been mentioned by Tenaganita’s co-founder:
“I want to state that there is no such thing as ‘illegal’ human beings. For me, the
whole world belongs to all of us. We are one earth. The only difference is that we
have defined the boundary whereby we define our nation, our citizenship. So they
1 Domestic Worker Right and The UFDWR, available from:http://www.apwld.org/our-work/domestic-worker-rights-and-the-ufdwr/2 Issue of the moment: ‘Crossing Boundaries : Protecting the Right of Migrant Domestic Workers’, 2 December2010, available onhttp://www.un.org/wcm/webdav/site/dpingorelations/shared/Documents/PDF%20Documents/Final%20Programme%202%20December%20Migrant%20Workers%20revised%20gbts.pdf
3
[migrant workers] don’t have the same documents that we have. That’s why we
[Tenaganita] refer to them as ‘undocumented’” (Irene Fernadez).
MDW remain one of the least protected groups of workers. The lack or absence of
protection means that they are highly vulnerable to a wide range of abuses and exploitation
which in its worst forms amount to forced labour and slavery. The abuse and exploitation of
MDW could potentially increase tensions between labour sending and receiving countries and
lead to regional instability. For example, cases of abuse and exploitation on Indonesian domestic
workers in Malaysia in 2010 led protesters in Indonesia to stir up nationalistic sentiments, using
slogans such as ‘Crush Malaysia’. Thus, a careful management of the migrant domestic work
sector is necessary not only to protect the (human and labour) rights of MDW but also to
maintain regional peace and security3.
This report will be divided into three parts. The first part will be dealing with laws
governing the migrant domestic worker. In this part we will discuss on what is lacking in the law
and whether the law is adequate or not to provide sufficient protection to the MDW. Second part
will be dealing with the international standards and MOU’s sign between Malaysia and sending
countries. In this part we will look on whether Malaysia is in line with the international standard
or not. Last but not least is the third part. Third part is on the functions of NGO’s and Statutory
Bodies in protecting the right of the migrant worker. This part will discuss what they have done
to enhance the protection. At the end of this report, we will give our conclusion on the adequacy
and recommendation.
3 The Domestic Workers Convention 2011: Implications for migrant domestic workers in Southeast Asia, NTSInsight April 2012, available from:http://www.rsis.edu.sg/nts/HTMLNewsletter/Insight/pdf/NTS_Insight_apr_1201.pdf
4
LAWS
1) FEDERAL CONSTITUTION
Article 8 of the Federal Constitution of Malaysia provides that “All Persons are equal before the
law and is entitled to equal protection of the law” and by the use of term “person” as opposed to
‘citizen’, it is most clear that this guarantee of rights extends to all persons, including migrant
workers, be they documented or undocumented. It must be pointed out that 6 of the 13 Articles
under Part II of the Federal Constitution entitled ‘Fundamental Liberties’ uses the word
“persons” as opposed to word ”citizens”, and as such usage of the word ‘persons’ in Article 8
clearly is not conscious but also important.
This equality is also reflected in our Employment Act 1955 which applies to all workers,
irrespective of whether the person is a local worker or a foreign worker (migrant worker). The
right to complain about discrimination is accorded to all workers, local or migrant, and the duty
is imposed on the Director General of Labour to inquire into these complaints4. In section 2 of
the Employment Act, being the interpretation section, the term employee is defined as:
"employee" means any person or class of persons-
(a) included in any category in the First Schedule to the extent specified therein; or
(b) in respect of whom the Minister makes an order under subsection (3) or section 2A;
In the First Schedule, item 1 which describes the first category of workers.
“...1. Any person, irrespective of his occupation, who has entered into a contract of service with
an employer under which such person's wages do not exceed one thousand five hundred ringgit a
month....”
And, item 2, describes the other category of workers covered by the Act.
“2. Any person who, irrespective of the amount of wages he earns in a month, has entered into a
contract of service with an employer in pursuance of which…”
4 Section 60L of Employment Act 1955
5
Besides the Federal Constitution, some of the domestic employment related laws that is
applicable to workers, including the Migrant Worker, are:-
1) Employment Act 1955 (West Malaysia)
2) Sabah Labour Ordinance (Sabah)
3) Sarawak Labour Ordinance (Sarawak)
4) Workmen’s Compensation Act 1952
5) Worker’s Minimum Standard of Housing and Amenities Act 1990
6) Children and Young Persons Act 1966
7) Industrial Relations Act 1967
8) Trade Unions Act 1959
9) Occupational Safety and Health Act 1994
10) Immigration Act 1959/63
11) Immigration Rules 1960
12) National Wages Consultative Council Act 2011
13) Anti-Trafficking in Persons and Anti-Smuggling of Migrants Act 2007
2) EMPLOYMENT ACT 1955
Purpose of the Act
This is the most important legislation with regard to employment in Malaysia. The purpose of
this Act is to provide protection and minimum benefits to the workers who are covered under this
Act. It is also to establish certain rights for both employers and employees.
Definition of Foreign Worker
The definition of foreign worker as well as domestic worker has been provided in the
Employment Act 1955 (here in after referred to as the Act), where it is the law that protects all
workers in relation to terms and conditions of their employment. Section 2(1)of Employment Act
1955, defines “foreign employee” as an employee who is not a citizen. In other words, this
definition shall also include legal migrant workers. Illegal immigrants cannot be regarded as
workers who have entered into a contract of service under this Act and it is not possible for them
6
to bring the case due to the absence of locus standi. Any contract must be agreed upon by the
parties who have legal status under the law.5
However, for domestic workers, they are not legally recognized as ‘workers’ (but as
‘servants’) under the Employment Act 1955. Section 2(1) of the Act mentions that
"domestic servant" means a person employed in connection with the work of a private dwelling-
house and not in connection with any trade, business, or profession carried on by the employer in
such dwelling-house and includes a cook, house-servant, butler, child's nurse, valet, footman,
gardener, washer-man or washer-woman, watchman, groom and driver or cleaner of any vehicle
licensed for private use. Thus, more than 230,000 domestic ‘workers’ are conspicuously
excluded from enjoying all the rights a regular worker would enjoy.6
Protection and Rights
This Act continues to categorically exclude domestic workers from labour protection provisions.
Regardless it has a special portion dedicated exclusively to the handling of foreign workers in
Part XII B under the heading of 'Employment of Foreign Employees', Schedule I stipulates that
Sections 12, 14, 16, 22, 61, and 64, and Part IX, XII, and XIIA are not applicable for domestic
workers. In brief, they are exempted from the provisions of minimum number of days work in
each month, maternity protection, hours of work, holidays, days off, termination, and overtime
pay which renders the protection on them is clearly insufficient under the law.
To be more precise, Part XII outlines requirements for conditions of service. Employees
are entitled, according to this act, to at least one rest day each seven-day period and should not be
required to work more than forty-eight hours a week or more than twelve hours a day. However,
the Act does not extend guarantees to domestic workers. Instead, these women are expected to
work long hours without break for very little pay.7
5Kamal Halili Hassan. 2007. Undang-undang Malaysia: 50 TahunMerentasiZaman. FakultiUndang-undangUniversitiKebangsaan Malaysia: Litmus Print Sdn. Bhd. p. 406-4076http://www.majodi.org/emi/index.php?option=com_k2&view=item&id=26:domestic-workers-to-enjoy-greater-protection&Itemid=347 Alice Huling, Domestic Workers in Malaysia: Hidden Victims of Abuse and Forced Labor, International Law andPolitics, 2012
7
3) INDUSTRIAL RELATION ACT 1967 AND TRADE UNIONS ACT 1959
The Industrial Relations Act and Trade Unions Act govern the formal industrial relations system
in the country and the law allows migrant workers to become members of trade unions (but not
hold office). In other words, migrant workers can join and be a part of a trade union but is
prohibited from holding an executive position in trade union8.
Definition
Considering the Trade Unions Act 1959, in particular section 2(the Interpretation
section), it is clear that the act does not distinguish on the basis of nationality of ‘employees’ or
‘workmen”. "employee", when used with reference to a trade union or political party means any
person who is engaged for hire or reward on a full-time or part-time basis; "workmen" means
any person, including an apprentice, employed by an employer under a contract of employment
to work for hire or reward and for the purposes of any proceedings in relation to a trade dispute
includes any such person who has been dismissed, discharged or retrenched in connection with
or as a consequence of that dispute or whose dismissal, discharge or retrenchment has led to that
dispute.
The definition of Trade Union in the Act is also important. “trade union" or "union"
means any association or combination of workmen or employers, being workmen whose place of
work is in West Malaysia, Sabah or Sarawak as the case may be, or employers employing
workmen in West Malaysia, Sabah or Sarawak, as the case may be:
(a) within any particular establishment trade, occupation or industry or within any similar
trades, occupations or industries: and
(b) whether temporary or permanent; and
(c) having among its objects one or more of the following objects-(i) the regulation of
relations between workmen and employers, for the purposes of promoting good industrial
relations between workmen and employers, improving the working conditions of
workmen or enhancing their economic and social status, or increasing productivity;
8 Section 28(1) of the Trade Union Act 1959
8
(ia) the regulation of relations between workmen and workmen, or between employers
and employers;
(ii) the representation of either workmen or employers in trade disputes;
(iia) the conducting of, or dealing with, trade disputes and matters related thereto; or
(iii) the promotion or organisation or financing of strikes or lock-outs is any trade or
industry or the provision of pay or other benefits for its members during astrike or lock-
out;
Rights
When we consider the specific provisions as to the formation of unions, we again see that there is
no deprivation of the right to migrant workers from forming unions in which we can see the
application in section 8 and 9 of the act.
9. Date of establishment of trade union.
(1) For the purposes of this Act, a trade union is established on the first date on which
any workmen or employers agree to become or to create an association or combination
within any particular establishment, trade, occupation or industry, and whether temporary
or permanent, for the furtherance of any one or more of the objects specified in the
DEFINITION of a trade union in section 2….
Further, Section 8 of the Employment Act 1955 also clearly recognizes the right of migrant
workers to organize trade unions.
8. Contracts of service not to restrict rights of employees to join, participate in or
organize trade unions.
Nothing in any contract of service shall in any manner restrict the right of any employee
who is a party to such contract-
(a) to join a registered trade union;
(b) to participate in the activities of a registered trade union, whether as an officer of such
union or otherwise; or
9
(c) to associate with any other persons for the purpose of organising a trade union in
accordance with the Trade Unions Act 1959.
However, although the laws are clear and the Department of Trade Union Affairs had
ruled that migrant workers may join trade unions representing other workers at their respective
enterprises, but the work permits issued by the Immigration Department stipulate, as a condition
of employment, that migrant workers may not join a “persatuan”, or association, which is
interpreted by employers to also mean a “kersatuan” – or trade union. Most employers
consequently prevent migrant workers from joining trade unions. In addition, since migrant
workers supplied by labour contractors are not treated as employees of the workplace where they
physically work, they are unable to join any of the existing 600 trade unions in the country –
which may only organize employees within similar industries or at the enterprise level.
Moreover, the right to organize has been further obstructed for migrant domestic workers who
are excluded from the minimum working conditions set out in the Employment Act and who
have recently been denied the exercise of their organizational rights due to the refusal by the
Registrar of Societies to register the newly created association for migrant domestic workers that
had been constituted by the Malaysian Trade Union Congress (MTUC).9
Today, the government has permitted certain employers, like the outsourcing companies
and labour supply companies, to have almost all workers who are migrant workers, and surely
these workers/employees must have the same right as accorded to all other workers in Malaysia.
Surely, workers in these companies also should be accorded the right to form unions.
4) WORKMEN’S COMPENSATION ACT 1952
The Workmen’s Compensation Act 1952 also excludes domestic workers. There are only
insurance schemes to protect domestic workers against accidents with long-lasting effects,
medical and repatriation expenses and hospitalization. Since 1998, every employee has been
required to contribute to the Employees Provident Fund (EPF)10. For domestic workers, the
9http://www.ilo.org/dyn/normlex/en/f?p=1000:50002:0::NO::P50002_COMPLAINT_TEXT_ID:2911366#110 Migrant labour in Southeast Asia
10
employer shall insure them with the Foreign Worker Compensation Scheme in respect of any
medical expenses the domestic worker may incur in the event of any injury where such injury
arises out of and in the course of employment.
5) IMMIGRATION ACT OF 1959/63
The Immigration Act of 1959/63 stipulates that individuals may not remain in Malaysia if they
are not in possession of a valid pass or permit. A person’s pass is invalid immediately upon the
expiration of the period of work that it is covering or if any of its terms or conditions are deemed
to be contravened. Thus, women who leave their place of work early, even if they leave due to
abuse or forced labor conditions are often arrested as illegal immigrants without the appropriate
documentation. One escaped domestic worker explained that she was scared because she knew
the Malaysian labor laws and felt that she would be prosecuted or deported, despite being the
victim of abuse.11
In fact this Act permits employers to unilaterally terminate the work permits of a migrant
worker and this is almost always done whenever a migrant worker lodges an official complaint
with the Malaysian authorities resulting in deportation even before the case comes up for hearing
before the courts. NGOs have over the years documented numerous cases where even pending
court cases are derailed solely because the Immigration Department arbitrarily denied permission
for migrant workers to stay and complete the trial.12
6) NATIONAL WAGES CONSULTATIVE COUNCIL ACT 2011
Minimum wages order
23. (1) Where the Government agrees with the recommendation of the Council under
paragraph 22(2)(a) or 22(4)(a) or determines the matters under paragraph 22(4)(b), the
11Alice Huling, Domestic Workers in Malaysia: Hidden Victims of Abuse and Forced Labor, International Law andPolitics, 2012
12http://www.majodi.org/emi/index.php?option=com_k2&view=item&id=26:domestic-workers-to-enjoy-greater-protection&Itemid=34
11
Minister shall, by notification in the Gazette, make a minimum wages order on the
matters specified in paragraphs 22(1)(a) to (e) as agreed to or determined by the
Government.
(2) The Minister may, upon the direction of the Government, by notification in the
Gazette, amend or revoke the minimum wages order.
In exercise of the power conferred by subsection 23(1) of the National Wages
Consultative Council Act 2011, the minister has passed the Minimum Wages Order 2012 where
the minimum wages rate payable to an employee shall be RM 900 per month in Peninsular
Malaysia and RM800 per month in Sabah, Sarawak and Federal Territory of Labuan.However,
this order shall not apply to a domestic servant in Malaysia.13 Until now, the government is still
silent on the issue of minimum wages payable to domestic helper particularly domestic migrant
workers.
7) ANTI-TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS AND ANTI-SMUGGLING OF MIGRANTS
ACT 2007
In 2007 Malaysia enacted its first legislation specifically banning human trafficking, with its
Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act, and seemed to indicate that the government was prepared to
tackle this issue in earnest. The legislation was largely passed in response to the country having
received a low ranking from the United States in its annual TIP Report, which indicated that the
country was failing to address its large human trafficking problem. Upon the act’s passage
Malaysia’s ranking was upgraded and it was placed on the U.S. State Department’s Tier 2 Watch
List, meaning that while there was still a lot of work ahead for the Malaysian government with
regard to improving conditions, its legislation was noted and appreciated. The act “clearly states
that servitude, long working hours and debt bondage are all elements of labour trafficking.”This
is commensurate with the international understanding of labor trafficking.
13 Order 3 Minimum Wages Order 2012
12
The Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act was amended in November 2010. The amendments
broadened the country’s definition of trafficking to include “all actions involved in acquiring or
maintaining the labor or services of a person through coercion.”While these amendments could
be a positive expansion of those punishable for human trafficking, the way the amendments were
presented threatened to further conflate human trafficking with human smuggling. This could
mean, however, that those individuals caught transporting victims are penalized while
individuals or groups orchestrating or most profiting from the trafficking, such as labor recruiters
or even employers, are not prosecuted.
As written, the anti-trafficking law would provide comprehensive means by which to
combat trafficking; however, it is not being sufficiently utilized, especially in prosecuting cases
of forced labor.14
8) WORKER’S MINIMUM STANDARD OF HOUSING AND AMENITIES ACT
1990
Whilst these laws do cover worker’s housing, accommodation and amenities in plantations, it
really must be amended to cover all migrant workers, including also the domestic worker.15
MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING (MOU)
1) INDONESIA16
Women from many countries throughout the region travel to Malaysia to take jobs as domestic
workers, with the highest number of the 300,000 women working in Malaysia coming from
14Alice Huling, Domestic Workers in Malaysia: Hidden Victims of Abuse and Forced Labor, International Law andPolitics, 201215 Migrant Workers in Malaysia and Protection under Domestic Law –Dato’ M Ramachelvam16 Alice Huling, Domestic Workers in Malaysia: Hidden victims of Abuse and Forced Labor, International Law andPolitics, (Vol 44:629), available athttp://www.law.nyu.edu/ecm_dlv3/groups/public/@nyu_law_website__journals__journal_of_international_law_and_politics/documents/documents/ecm_pro_072115.pdf.
13
Indonesia.17 In some cases the Malaysian government has set up individual agreements with the
governments of these countries to determine employment terms for domestic workers. Rather
than create binding bilateral agreements, however, Malaysia has signed Memoranda of
Understanding that are not actually binding on either state party.18 Terms for Indonesia domestic
workers in Malaysia are laid out in a MOU established between the two countries in 2006 and
revise in 2011.19
Following a rash of abuses in Malaysia and a disappointingly weak official response, the
Indonesian government in June of 2009 put a ban on new migration of domestic workers to the
country.20 Such action, however, does not necessarily help those women who are driven to seek
work abroad due to dire poverty at home. As the ban continued while discussions of a new MOU
flagged, it was feared that the number of women illegally seeking domestic work in Malaysia
would drastically increase.21 The Malaysian government responded to the ban by stating that it
would have to seek hired help in greater numbers from Thailand and the Philippines, noting that
it has always received good, Muslim domestic workers from those countries.22 In actuality, the
ban did result in an increase of domestic workers from Cambodia but also a discernible decrease
17 Indonesia/Malaysia: Proposed Labor Pact Lacks Key Reforms, HUM. RTS. WATCH (Mar. 4, 2010),http://www.hrw.org/news/2010/03/04/indonesiamalaysia-proposed-labor-pact-lacks-key-reforms [hereinafterProposed Labor Pact].
18 Naj Ghosheh, Protecting the Housekeeper: Legal Agreements Applicable to International Migrant DomesticWorkers, 25 INT’L J. COMP. LAB. L. & INDUS. REL.301, 302 (2009). p 314-315.
19 Memorandum of Understanding Between the Government of the Republic of Indonesia and the Government ofMalaysia on the Recruitment and Placement of Indonesian Domestic Workers, Indon.-Malay., May 13, 2006],available at http:// www.caramasia.org/docs/MoU%20My-Indonesia%202006.pdf. Revisions came when the MOUwas renewed to address the problematic provisions within the Agreement. However, both revisions have beenconsidered disappointments by many human rights activists, as they have failed to address some of the mostproblematic aspects of the MOU. The most recent version of the 2011 MOU is not currently publically available.
20 Indonesia: Guarantee Domestic Workers’ Rights in 2010: Government Slow to Address Discrimination andMistreatment Both at Home and Abroad, HUM. RTS. WATCH (Feb. 13, 2010), available athttp://www.hrw.org/en/news/2010/02/12/indonesia-guarentee-domestic-workers-rights-2010.21 Putri Prameshwari, Malaysian Maid Deal Sunk Again, JAKARTA GLOBE (July 14, 2010), available athttp://thejakartaglobe.com/home/malaysian-maid-dealsunk-again/385714
22 Malaysia Says Indonesia Maid Deal Delayed; Will Look Elsewhere for Hired Help, JAKARTA GLOBE (July 13,2010), available at http://thejakartaglobe.com/home/malaysia-says-indonesia-maid-deal-delayed-will-look-elsewhere-for-hiredhelp/385560.
14
in the overall number of domestic workers employed in Malaysia.23 In May 2011 the two
governments finally signed a new MOU, which addresses some, though certainly not all, of the
provisions triggering human rights concerns but do little to indicate how it will be any more
effectively carried out than its predecessor.
This agreement details protections and terms to which workers are entitled but also has
some restrictive and problematic sections. The MOU is completely silent on some key issues,
such as minimum wage, and is explicit in allowing other regressive and potentially dangerous
practices. For example, though the newest iteration of the MOU does guarantee one rest day a
week (an improvement over the 2006 MOU, which had no such provision); it states that “a one-
day off can be compensated with overtime pay.”24 Thus, employers will have the option of
paying domestic workers to forgo their day of rest, presumably adding some amount of extra pay
to the pre-agreed monthly rate.25 However, there is nothing stipulating the amount of overtime
pay that is appropriate to compensate for skipping a rest day, and the MOU does not provide the
mechanics for how that overtime pay is monitored or delivered. As such, this provision seems
prone to abuse and demonstrates the governments’ refusal to recognize the extreme disparity in
negotiating power between Malaysian employers and poor, foreign, and often young women
from Indonesia.
Other parts of the MOU involve vague language, consequently avoiding the
establishment of finite standards with which employers would then have to comply. For
example, the MOU says that employers shall provide “reasonable accommodation” and
“adequate rest,” yet does not set any minimums defining those requirements.26 Some parts of the
23 Indonesia/Malaysia: New Pact Shortchanges Domestic Workers, HUM. RTS. WATCH (May 31, 2011), availableat http://www.hrw.org/news/2011/05/31/indonesiamalaysia-new-pact-shortchanges-domestic-worker. . [hereinafterNew Pact Shortchanges Domestic Workers].
24 Irene Fernandez, Malaysia Continues to Sustain Modern-day Slavery in Domestic Work, SAYA ANAK BANGSAMALAYSIA (May 27, 2010), available athttp://sayaanak bangsamalaysia.net/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=365:malaysia-continues-to-
sustain-modern-day-slavery-in-domestic-work&catid=1:letters&Itemid=
25 Indonesian Maid Issue Nears Settlement, NEW STRAITS TIMES (May 18, 2010), available athttp://www.nst.com.my/nst/articles/Indonesianmaidissuenearssettlement/Article26 Indonesia- Malaysia MOU, May 2011.
15
MOU are clearer about their requirements, such as those relating to the costs the employers are
supposed to cover. The new MOU stipulates that recruitment fees are capped at U.S. $1,500,
which employers are required to pay up front.27 It also prohibits employers from passing on
recruitment fees of more than U.S. $600 to domestic workers and only allows deductions of up to
fifty percent of their monthly wages. The MOU also stipulates that Indonesian women be able to
communicate in either Malay or English in order to enter the country as domestic workers.
One important provision that was included in the most recent MOU after much pressure
from the international and NGO communities is an allowance for Indonesian domestic workers
to keep their passports. The 2006 MOU explicitly directed employers to hold workers’ passports,
meaning that a domestic employee’s legal status in the country was completely dependent on her
employer. That the new version allows domestic workers to keep their passports instead of
having to surrender them to employers is a positive change, according to Human Rights
Watch.28. But the agreement does not set a minimum wage, as Indonesia had wanted, and
perpetuates recruitment fee structures that leave workers indebted.29
Further, in the latest memorandum of understanding between Malaysia and Indonesia on
domestic workers in the country, there are escape clauses built in that place the domestic worker
in a vulnerable state. The government did agree to a separate bank account for domestic workers,
one-day off a week, and for passports to be kept with the worker herself. There are, however,
follow-up clauses which state that the one-day off can be converted into ‘overtime’ and passports
can be kept for ‘safe keeping’ by the employer. It is like the right hand gives and the left hand
takes it away.30
27 Ibd. New Pact Shortchanges Domestic Workers, available at:http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2011/05/31/indonesiamalaysia-new-pact-shortchanges-domestic-workers.
28 World Report 2012: Malaysia, available at http://www.hrw.org/world-report-2012/world-report-2012-malaysia.
29 Ibd. New Pact Shortchanges Domestic Workers, available athttp://www.hrw.org/en/news/2011/05/31/indonesiamalaysia-new-pact-shortchanges-domestic-workers.
30R B Bhattacharjee, Respect All Workers’ Rrights, Govt Told, 10 May 2012, available athttp://www.theedgemalaysia.com/in-the-financial-daily/213205-respect-all-workers-rights-govt-told.html.
16
2) CAMBODIA31
Many Cambodian migrant workers abroad are employed in domestic work, that is, work carried
out for an employer’s household, such as cooking, cleaning, looking after family members and
other household tasks. Malaysia is a major destination country for Cambodian migrant domestic
workers (as well as migrant workers from other countries in the region), who are predominantly
young women32.
The history of this migration trend has not been an easy one and its future is not yet clear.
Such was the extent of media reports on abuses, exploitation and even deaths of Cambodian
domestic workers in Malaysia that on October 15th, 2011 the Prime Minister of Cambodia
announced a ban on the recruitment, training and sending of domestic workers to Malaysia. This
ban still remains in place, although many Cambodian domestic workers who were already there
prior to the ban remain in Malaysia and it is believed that some are still going, through unofficial
channels33.
A major issue contributing to the problems faced by domestic workers is that their
situation has long been ignored or indeed purposefully excluded from many legal protections
provided to other categories of workers, both in Malaysia and Cambodia, as well as in many
countries worldwide. This reflects the undervaluing of this type of work by society in general,
the view of domestic workers as “servants” rather than as “workers” and a reluctance to
acknowledge private dwelling houses as places of employment that require to be regulated. Add
the challenges faced by domestic workers to the discrimination and human rights abuses
experienced by migrants in general and it is clear that migrant domestic workers are a category at
high risk of having their human rights violated. Within this context, perhaps the multitudes of
problem cases leading to the ban are not so surprising34.
31 Hoping for a brighter future for Cambodian migrant domestic workers. December 12, 2012. available athttp://www.worldjusticeproject.org/blog/hoping-brighter-future-cambodian-migrant-domestic-workers-032Ibid33 Ibid34 Ibid
17
In June 2011, domestic work came under the international spotlight when the
International Labour Organization adopted Convention 189 concerning decent work for domestic
workers. This Convention guarantees minimum labour protections to domestic workers on an
equal basis with other categories of workers. Neither Malaysia nor Cambodia has yet ratified
this Convention, the protections of which would assist both their national domestic workers and
migrants. The Malaysian and Cambodian governments have, however, commenced a dialogue
surrounding the issue of Cambodian domestic workers in Malaysia which surely must be seen as
progress. The two governments are in the process of negotiating a Memorandum of
Understanding on the recruitment and employment of Cambodian domestic workers in
Malaysia35.
Even if this Memorandum of Understanding is agreed, is it enough to protect this
vulnerable category of migrants? Although it may be a step in the right direction (depending of
course on the terms of the agreed draft which remains to be seen), a Memorandum of
Understanding alone will not have sufficient force or effect to really grant these workers the
rights that they have been long denied and well deserve. That will require changes to national
laws and a high level of commitment from those enforcing and implementing those laws,
accompanied by a change in society’s view of these workers generally, to recognize domestic
workers for what they are – employees who are employed to work in their employer’s
households on tasks their employer wants their help with. Migrant domestic workers also fit
within this description, the main difference being that they have left their homes and travelled to
a new place, most likely encountering many further challenges, in order to fulfill this role36.
3) BANGLADESH37
A Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) on manpower export was signed between the
government of Bangladesh and Malaysia in November 2012. Malaysia has announced the
recruitment of Bangladeshi workers from January 2013. According to the agreement signed,
35 Hoping for a brighter future for Cambodian migrant domestic workers. December 12, 2012. available athttp://www.worldjusticeproject.org/blog/hoping-brighter-future-cambodian-migrant-domestic-workers-036 Ibid37 Aparupa Bhattacherjee, Malaysia: MOU wirh Bangladesh on Manpower Export, 23 January 2013, available athttp://www.ipcs.org/article/india-the-world/malaysia-mou-with-bangladesh-on-manpower-export-3801.html
18
plantation workers will be recruited first, followed by workers for other sectors. Interested
applicants keen on working in Malaysia have to register themselves. There will be no role of
middlemen and workers will be allowed tenure of up to five years. The minimum wage will be
900 Malaysian Ringgit, which is equivalent to 25,000 Bangladeshi Taka38.
The UN estimates that nearly 50 to 150 Bangladeshis travel to Malaysia every week by
paying traffickers operating the illegal sea routes. The MOU signed is a naïve step taken towards
stopping illegal migration. Moreover, the applicant worker can evade the involvement of
traffickers or dishonest manpower agents who play a major role in the process. The agreement
will put a stop to the harassment and exploitation of Bangladeshi immigrants working in
Malaysia. It is a low cost affair allowing many such people from poor households and backward
regions to avail the opportunity to work in Malaysia’s labour market. Before the signing of the
MOU, the recruitment of such Bangladeshi workers was an expensive procedure. The hiring
process, which is based on government-to-government arrangements, would also provide a better
mechanism of recruitment in comparison to those going through agencies and middlemen. The
MOU has strengthened the already existing strong bond between Bangladesh and Malaysia39.
The MOU signed is in fact a blessing for the Bangladeshi government, as the country is
heavily dependent on remittances by expatriate Bangladeshis. In fact, after the garment industry,
remittances are the second largest foreign exchange earner for Bangladesh. The three countries
most Bangladeshi workers migrate to are Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Malaysia.
However, since 2007, Saudi Arabia has stopped hiring manpower from Bangladesh; recently,
even the United Arab Emirates has stopped issuing fresh visas to Bangladeshi workers. Against
the backdrop of this substantial decline in manpower export to key Arabian countries, the signing
of this MOU with Malaysia is critical for Bangladesh. Bangladeshi workers often encounter
discrimination and face the humiliation of being termed unruly and prone to getting involved in
criminal activities. The social stigma Malaysian society associate with these workers may be
done away through this government-to-government arrangement. Former policies of the
Bangladesh government used to restrict labour migration of women, as they were more prone to
exploitation. The majority of migrants, therefore, were male workers leading to a gender
38 Aparupa Bhattacherjee, Malaysia: MOU wirh Bangladesh on Manpower Export, 23 January 2013, available athttp://www.ipcs.org/article/india-the-world/malaysia-mou-with-bangladesh-on-manpower-export-3801.html39 Ibid
19
imbalance. In this regard, the security assured by the MOU might also encourage female
migrants to travel to Malaysia for work40.
Malaysia boasts of a newly industrialized market economy, which is growing rapidly.
Due to rapid development, most educated Malaysians are shifting towards service sectors that
promise a better standard of living. As a result, there is greater demand for foreign workers to fill
gaps in the labour-intense markets of palm oil, construction, domestic help, and other such
sectors that Malaysians are generally not involved in. There has always been an influx of
migrants into Malaysia, mostly from neighbouring countries such as Indonesia, the Philippines,
and Bangladesh, in search of jobs. Recently, Indonesian and Filipino workers, who are provided
training by their governments, have become costly compared to their Bangladeshi counterparts.
Thus, the need for cheap labour in the different sectors of the Malaysian economy is expected to
be met by Bangladeshi workers arriving under the recent agreement reached by the signing of the
MOU41.
At this juncture, however, two pertinent questions arise. First, will the signing of this
MOU help in successfully curbing the illegal migration of thousands of Bangladeshis? Second,
will it effectively end the harassment and exploitation migrant workers are subjected to? The
answers to these questions can be positive if productive steps are taken on behalf of both the
governments involved. Strict patrolling of the maritime region will deter the migrants to take
advantage of the illegal sea routes. Night-time patrolling by the Bangladesh Border Security
Force in areas prone to illegal migration can restrain such activities. Bangladeshi workers are
prone to exploitation due to the absence of proper legislations that protect their rights on behalf
of both the exporting country and receiving country. Moreover language sometimes poses a huge
barrier for these migrant workers. So, the Bangladesh government will be providing their
migrant workers with language and culture training of the receiving country. Thus, the success of
the MOU depends on the initiative taken both by the Malaysian and Bangladeshi governments
for the betterment of their citizens42.
40 Aparupa Bhattacherjee, Malaysia: MOU wirh Bangladesh on Manpower Export, 23 January 2013, available athttp://www.ipcs.org/article/india-the-world/malaysia-mou-with-bangladesh-on-manpower-export-3801.html41 Ibid42 Ibid
20
RATIFICATION OF INTERNATIONAL TREATIES/ CONVENTIONS
1) INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW
“Whereas recognition of the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable
rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice
and peace in the world.”
That is the first sentence in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. As a member of the
United Nations, Malaysia has proclaimed to hold this Declaration to the highest standards, to
protect & promote respect for these rights and freedoms, and to actively secure effective
recognition of these rights for all persons. “Inherent, universal, inalienable rights” applies, of
course, to migrant workers too and it applies to all 2.6 million migrant workers in Malaysia.
Article 24 of the UN Declaration of Human Rights further states that “everyone has the right to
rest and leisure, including reasonable limitation of working hours and periodic holidays with
pay.”
Accompanying, and perhaps enabling, the growth of international migration has been a
concurrent development of international organizations and law. Much of the growth of
international law that has occurred over the last sixty years has been in the field of human rights
law. The international community has seemingly acknowledged certain inalienable human rights
that no government or ruler should be able to deny. In 1948, the General Assembly of the United
Nations set out these fundamental rights in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR)
and stated that they were to be globally and comprehensively protected.43 While this is not a
binding document establishing specific obligations of member states, it is meant to delineate the
rights of citizens and noncitizens that all states must honor. However, many of the rights set forth
in this document are not guaranteed to foreign domestic workers by Malaysian law.
43 Universal Declaration of Human Rights, G.A. Res. 217 (III) A, U.N. Doc. A/RES/217(III) (Dec. 10, 1948)[hereinafter UDHR].
21
The UDHR enumerates many fundamental rights that are to be protected and clarifies in
article 2 that all people, irrespective of their race, gender, religion, or country of origin are
entitled to these rights.44 The Declaration states that everyone has the right to security of
person,45 that no one should be subject to cruel or degrading treatment or punishment,46 and that
everyone has a right to a standard of living adequate for health and well-being.47 Everyone
should have the right to leave any country,48 the right to peacefully assemble and associate,49 and
the right to participate in cultural life.50 These rights are effectively denied when employers keep
their workers’ passports and the immigration laws are such that individuals cannot exit their
workplace without their papers. Furthermore, the UDHR guarantees that no one shall be held in
slavery or servitude,51 a basic expectation that is not being fulfilled given the current frequency
of forced labor conditions faced by many domestic workers in Malaysia.
The non-discrimination provisions of the UDHR have become customary international
law and some, such as the rule against discrimination on the basis of race, sex, or country of
origin, may even be jus cogens.52 It is not yet the case, however, that all human rights have
reached the point of jus cogens.53 Malaysia has not signed or ratified the two general human
44 Ibd. art. 2.
45 Ibd. art. 3.
46 Ibd. art. 5.
47 Ibd. art. 25.
48 Ibd. art. 13.
49 Ibd. art. 20.
50 Ibd. art. 27.
51 Ibd. art. 4.
52 See Li Weiwei, Equality and Non-Discrimination Under International Human Rights Law, RESEARCH NOTES(Norwegian Centre For Hum. Rts.), 2004, at 19–20, available athttp://www.mittendrinundaussenvor.de/fileadmin/bilder/0304.pdf (“There is little doubt that the right to equality andnon-discrimination has the character of jus cogens.”).
53 Andrew L. Strauss, Where America Ends and the International Order Begins: Interpreting the JurisdictionalReach of the U.S. Constitution in Light of a Proposed Hague Convention on Jurisdiction and Satisfaction ofJudgments, 61 ALB. L.REV. 1237, 1266 n.122 (1998) (identifying fundamental human rights as jus cogens,implying that some human rights are not fundamental, and thus not jus cogens).
22
rights treaties, i.e.; the International Convention on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
(ICESCR) and the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), and thus is
not formally bound by those conventions.54 Malaysia would only be bound by those provisions
which have reached the status of customary international law or jus cogens. Even without
signing any additional treaties, however, Malaysia is still failing to fulfill its current obligations.
Malaysia is party to the 1979 Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), and as such must “pursue by all appropriate means . .
. a policy of eliminating discrimination against women.”55 According to the CEDAW
Committee’s definition of gender-based violence, a practice or human rights abuse that
disproportionately affects women’s ability to enjoy their basic rights constitutes discrimination.56
Under this definition, the exploitative conditions which domestic workers face would be
characterized as gender-based discrimination. By failing to adequately address these abuses the
Malaysian government is ignoring its CEDAW obligations to provide women and men equal
employment and remuneration.
Malaysia has also signed the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish the Trafficking in
Persons, Especially Women and Children, Supplementing the United Nations
ConventionAgainst Transnational Organized Crime.57 This protocol focuses on human
trafficking conducted by organized crime syndicates and is not directly applicable in the type of
54 Malaysia has not signed either the International Convention on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, Dec. 16,1966, 999 U.N.T.S. 3, or the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights, Dec. 16, 1966, 999 U.N.T.S.171. For a list of signatories to the ICESCR, see I MULTILATERAL TREATIES DEPOSITED WITH THESECRETARY-GENERAL, at 182, U.N. Doc. ST/ LEG/SER.E/26, U.N. Sales No. E.09.V.3 (2009), available athttp://treaties.un.org/doc/source/publications/MTDSG/2009/English-I.pdf
55 Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women art. 2, Dec. 18, 1979, 1249U.N.T.S. 13. For a list of signatories to the Convention, see I MULTILATERAL TREATIES DEPOSITED WITHTHE SECRETARY-GENERAL, [hereinafter CEDAW].56 Ibd. CEDAW, art. 2, Dec. 18, 1979.
57 Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and Children, Supplementingthe United Nations Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime, Nov. 15, 2000, 2237 U.N.T.S. 319. For acurrent list of signatories, see III MULTILATERAL TREATIES DEPOSITEDWITH THE SECRETARY-GENERAL, at 255, U.N. Doc. ST/LEG/SER.E/26, U.N. Sales No. E.09.V.3 (2009),available at http://treaties.un.org/doc/source/publications/MTDSG/2009/English-III.pdf.
23
arrangements through which domestic workers in Malaysia find themselves in forced labor
conditions. However, in signing this protocol, Malaysia committed to fight human trafficking,
and it could better honor that obligation by acknowledging the organized and systematic
trafficking of domestic workers that occurs throughout the country.
2) INTERNATIONAL LABOR RIGHTS
The particular rights and concerns of laborers are recognized in a number of more specific
treaties. One treaty that is particularly applicable to the needs of Indonesian and other migrant
women travelling to Malaysia as domestic workers is the 2003 International Convention on the
Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families (CMW).58
Malaysia hosted close to 4 million migrant workers in 2009,59 and its economy is highly
dependent upon the output of these laborers. Despite this dependence Malaysia is not one of the
forty-five states party to this international treaty guaranteeing basic rights for such workers. The
CMW requires that migrant workers be treated on an equal basis with nationals in terms of
fundamental human rights, such as freedom from violence and exploitation.60 However, this
document does not sufficiently address some of the gender-specific problems faced by women
serving as domestic workers in Malaysia.61
The International Labor Organization (ILO) has recognized that the women migrating to
perform domestic work in growing numbers are disproportionately exposed to abuse and
exploitation. On June 16, 2011 the ILO adopted a new treaty, the Convention on Decent Work
58 International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families,Dec. 18, 1990, 2220 U.N.T.S. 3 (entered into force July 1, 2003) [hereinafter CMW], available athttp://www2.ohchr.org/english/law/cmw.htm
59 U.S. DEP’T OF STATE, TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS REPORT 7–8 (10th ed. 2010) [hereinafter 2010 TIPREPORT], available at: http://www.state.gov/g/tip/rls/tiprpt/2010/index.htm. 2010 TIP REPORT, at 223
60 CMW, art.11, 25–26, 43.
61 Glenda Labadie-Jackson, Reflections on Domestic Work and the Feminization of Migration, 31 CAMPBELL L.REV. 67, 82 (2008). at 88.
24
for Domestic Workers, addressing issues faced by domestic workers.62 In developing his
convention, the ILO attempted to come up with provisions that offer domestic workers the
specific protection that they deserve, without condoning the State enactment of restrictive
legislation characterizing women as inherently vulnerable. According to one senior women’s
rights researcher for Human Rights Watch, this convention is “a long overdue recognition of
housekeepers, nannies, and caregivers as workers who deserve respect and equal treatment under
the law.”63 It is hoped that this convention, which was overwhelmingly supported by the
governments, employers’ organizations, and trade unions making up the ILO, will result in
increased protections for domestic workers.
When the majority of countries at the International Labour Organisation voted in support
of the Domestic Workers Convention (ILO Convention 189), Malaysia abstained despite having
over 200,000 domestic workers in the country and having active plans to recruit more.64 It
argued that domestic work is not “ordinary employment” and therefore a legally binding treaty
would compromise the rights of householders and create unrealistic obligations for employers.65
The International Labour Organisation (ILO) has adopted a groundbreaking treaty that
sets the first global standards for the estimated 50 to 100 million domestic workers worldwide.
Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand and Britain, however, abstained from voting on the Convention
on Decent Work for Domestic Workers 2011. Under Article 21 of the Convention, the treaty is
only binding on countries that ratify it. Governments ratifying the convention must provide
domestic workers with protection equivalent to those of other workers, including for working
hours, minimum wage coverage, overtime compensation, daily and weekly rest periods, social
62 ILO, Text for the Convention Concerning Decent Work for Domestic Workers, PR.15A (June 16, 2011), availableat:http://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/—-ed_norm/—-relconf/documents/meetingdocument/wcms_157836.pdf.
63 Nisha Varia, ILO: New Landmark Treaty to Protect Domestic Workers, HUM. RTS. WATCH (June 16, 2011),available at http://www.hrw.org/news/2011/06/16/ilo-new-landmarktreaty-protect-domestic-workers64 Ibd. Respect All Workers’ Rrights, Govt Told, available at http://www.theedgemalaysia.com/in-the-financial-daily/213205-respect-all-workers-rights-govt-told.html.
65Pau Khan Khup Hangzo and Alistair D.B. Cook,The Domestic Workers Convention 2011: Implications for migrant domestic workers in Southeast Asia. available atwww.rsis.edu.sg/nts/HTML-Newsletter/.../NTS-Insight-apr-1201.html
25
security and maternity protection. The treaty also obliges them to protect the workers from
violence and abuse, and to ensure effective monitoring and enforcement.
The convention requires governments to set a minimum age for domestic work and to
ensure work by child domestic workers above that age does not interfere with their education. An
accompanying recommendation to the convention urges governments to limit their working
hours and to prohibit work that would harm their health, safety or morals. The new convention
also requires governments to regulate private employment agencies, investigate complaints, and
prohibit the practice of deducting domestic workers’ salaries to pay recruitment fees. The
convention also stipulates migrant domestic workers must receive a written contract that is
enforceable in the country of employment.66
ENFORCEMENT MECHANISM OF MOU
Domestic workers in Malaysia are wholly under-protected, with their safety and fair treatment
being almost entirely based upon the attitudes and practices of their assigned employers. The
Indonesian-Malaysian MOU stipulates that Malaysian laws should be applicable to Indonesian
domestic workers while they are in Malaysia. While it makes sense that migrants should be
subject to and protected by the receiving state’s laws, this does not work as well in cases where
the receiving country does not have laws specifying the rights of domestic workers.67
Domestic work, by its very nature, is different from other forms of labor. Since it is work
performed within the household, it is often excluded from the receiving country’s existent labor
laws and thus has no functional oversight mechanism.68 This is the case in Malaysia, where
domestic workers are specifically not covered by the Employment Act. Malaysian labor laws
66 ILO adopts standards for domestic workers, June 20, 2011, available athttp://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2011/6/20/nation/8931276&sec=nation.
67 Naj Ghosheh, Protecting the Housekeeper: Legal Agreements Applicable to International Migrant DomesticWorkers, 25 INT’L J. COMP. LAB. L. & INDUS. REL. 301, 302 (2009),
68 Glenda Labadie-Jackson, Reflections on Domestic Work and the Feminization of Migration, 31 CAMPBELL L.REV. 67, 82 (2008).
26
stipulate that provisions on working hours, rest days, and other conditions of service are not
applicable to domestic workers, who consequently work much longer days without rest periods
than other laborers.69 These resulting disparities between domestic help’s working hours and
other workers’ are a clear violation of international human rights standards, including the
UDHR’s non-discrimination clause.70
Domestic workers are normally kept almost exclusively within the confines of private
homes, abuses against these women are not readily observable, as would be the case in larger,
more public places of employment.71 Though Malaysia has recognized the governmental
obligation to protect against domestic violence and enacted legislation guaranteeing protection
from and outlining punishment for domestic abusers, it has refused to extend these protections to
household employees. Thus, the organizational fear of public intrusion into the private sphere
continues to prevent effective and sufficient protection of domestic workers
The MOU outlines the basic requirements of the employers, recruiters, and workers but it
does not establish any specific enforcement mechanisms, nor does it obligate the Malaysian
government to monitor the fulfillment of its listed requirements. This means that compliance
with the MOU’s terms is based almost entirely upon the “integrity of the employer and
government officials,” many of whom are not familiar with the document’s content.
Furthermore, the existence of an array of other sending country agreements with various
stipulated terms and requirements means that policing and monitoring is even more complicated
and thus less likely to be realized.
Employers who prohibit domestic workers from ever leaving the premise or house where
they are working are clearly committing human rights violations, yet the government does not
prosecute or even monitor this conduct. Under the old MOU72, which directed Malaysian
69 Employment Act (Act No. 265/1955) (Malay.), available athttp://crestforce.net/admin/FileStorage/crestforce/Payroll/LabourLaw.pdf;BOOKLET
70 Ibd. UDHR., art 2.
71 Ibd. Reflections on Domestic Work and the Feminization of Migration, 31 CAMPBELL L. REV. 67, 82 (2008). at85.
72 Ibd, Indonesia-Malaysia MOU, 2006.
27
employers to keep Indonesian domestic workers’ passports, these women were even further
prevented from exiting the house alone. This provision meant that not only could individuals be
prohibited from leaving for a few hours if they did have time off, but also that there were serious
barriers in place to their attempting to depart from an abusive and dangerous environment. The
new MOU73 allows domestic workers to maintain possession of their documentation, but it is not
clear what will be done to ensure that this is actually happening. Without enforcement by the
Malaysian government, there is no reason to believe that this new provision will have any
tangible benefit for these women.
FUNCTION OF NGO’s AND STATUTORY BODIES IN PROTECTING
THE RIGHT OF MDW
There are a great number and diverse workers’ rights organizations and trade unions in Malaysia.
Although they were quite militant in the early post-Independence years, most trade unions have
had their activities curtailed to suit the economic needs of the government. Enterprise-based
unions and agreements have replaced industrial trade unions and they lack resources for effective
negotiation and are discouraged from forming federations74. However, labour organizations in
Malaysia have been active in mobilising migrant labour. The Trade Union Act allows legally
resident migrant workers to become union members, although this right is often excluded from
workers’ individual contracts.
Sahabat Wanita, a national organization of women’s workers, does not deal specifically with
migrant women workers, but refers them instead to migrant worker organizations. At the same
time, however, Sahabat Wanita sees its role as one of education and changing the mindsets of
local workers about the needs and conditions of migrant workers, who are often perceived as
taking away local jobs. Most have focused their attention on domestic issues, particularly
campaigns to eliminate violence against women, and have rarely included noncitizens in their
activities. A minority of women’s groups, including Women’s Aid Organization (WAO),
SUARAM (Voice of Malaysians) and All Women’s Action Society (AWAM) have addressed
73 Ibd, Indonesia-Malaysia MOU, 2011.
74 Eldridge, Philip J. 2002. "Malaysia: 'Illiberal democracy' and human rights." In The Politics ofHuman Rights in Southeast Asia, London: Routledge. p.96
28
issues to do with migrant worker rights issues. In some instances, these organizations have
worked in partnership with Malaysia’s most visible migrant worker organization, Tenaganita75.
1) ADVOCACY
Since MDW usually consists of person who does not know laws and their rights, they need
someone to explain their right. Most of the abusive cases happen because these MDW do not
know their right and where should they lodge their complaint to. This is where NGO’s plays a
vital role. They need to advocate these people on their rights as well as create awareness among
the public. Tenaganita76 had introduced a programme called Migrants Rights and Health Desk.
This program provides for an advocacy and support to the migrant domestic worker.
Persatuan Majikan Amah Malaysia (MAMA), was established to protect the right of both
the employer and migrant domestic worker. MAMA had introduced a project named ‘HELPER’
which includes training to the maids, briefing to the employer, monitoring violence against the
domestic worker and introducing special financial system to ensure payment of wages made by
the employer consistently. Furthermore, this project also will oblige the worker to take takaful
insurance in order to prevent employers should bear the medical expenses caused by an accident
while working to prevent employers from bearing the medical expenses caused by an accident
while working77.
Malaysian Association of Foreign Maid Agencies (PAPA) is an organization which brings
together all employment agencies licensed by the Department of Manpower, Ministry of Human
Resources and registered with the Malaysian Immigration Department to recruit and bring in
75 Lenore Lyons, The Limits of Transnational Activism: Organizing for Migrant Worker Rights in Malaysia andSingapore, 2006, p.10-11. Available fromhttp://cccg.umontreal.ca/pdf/Lenore%20Lyons_en.pdf76 Tenaganita (or ‘Women’s Force’) was formed in 1991 to “promote and protect the rights of all women andmigrant workers within a globalized world”. Tenaganita is registered as a non-profit company and does not have amembership base like a traditionally structured NGO. Instead, it works with a large number of volunteers (estimatedat over 1000) and uses a subscription basis for membership to specific programmes. Tenaganita’s activities areorganised under several programs that seek to “empower, organize and consolidate migrant and women workers notonly in Malaysia but regionally” available from http://www.tenaganita.net/about-us/#mission77 Amah Indonesia Wajar dilindungi- Maulya, MStar Online, available from: http://www.myhazman.com/amah-indonesia-wajar-dilindungi-mulya?color=red
29
foreign workers including house maids. This organization also provides services such as advising
and assists complainants to settle their problems with member agencies78.
2) LEGAL REPRESENTATION
In 2011, Tenaganita handled the cases of 453 migrants in Malaysia, who were predominantly
victims of labour trafficking, including migrant workers, refugees and domestic workers. The top
key violations were: unpaid wages; arrest, detention & deportation; denial of days of
rest; overtime wages not paid; absence of a contract signed between the employer and the
employee. These forms of violations reflect both the abuse of labour rights and the state of
‘forced labour’ that these migrants were in while in Malaysia. These forms of violations are also
not random acts by abusive employers.
Another NGO which also helped MDW in giving them legal representation is Parti
Sosialis Malaysia (PSM)79. PSM has seven manifestos in which one of them is to safeguard the
workers right. PSM got involved by helping the workers to file the case and revive the complaint
at the labour department. They then will started working on for the Special Pass to legitimize the
worker as their former employer had with them the work permits80.
Even though Woman Aid Organization (WAO) did not represent the MDW, but they
helped in obtaining lawyers and initiating civil and criminal suits. Furthermore, they also insisted
on obtaining a lawyer to hold a watching brief of the criminal proceeding of the abuse case.
Besides, they assist in filing the complaints with the police, welfare and labour department as
well as gathering medical reports and other evidence of abuse81.
78 http://www.papa.org.my/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=46&Itemid=7379 PSM was established on 30th October 1998. It became the first party contested for general election in 1999.80 The Story of Aye Cho; When Migrant Workers File a Case Against Their Employer, 2th October 2012, availablefrom: http://partisosialis.org/en/node/237681 Migrant Domestic Worker Abuse, available from:http://www.wao.org.my/Migrant+Domestic+Workers_54_5_1.htm
30
3) CAMPAIGNING
Many of the NGO’s voices their opinion on the abusive treatment done to the MDW. Among
them are WAO, SUARAM, SUHAKAM, Bar Council, PAPA, MAMA , Tenaganita and others.
In 1995, after a series of severe abuse cases, WAO began documenting the women’s
experiences, using the press to highlight the problem of MDW. they also work hard in lobbying
the media for case coverage and advocacy to raise the agenda of MDW’s right and to educate
public on the rights of MDW- that abuse is a violation of her human right and punishable by
law82.
On 9th May 2012, Tenaganita had released a press statement on the truth of migrants in
Malaysia saying that As a member of the United Nations, Malaysia has proclaimed to hold
UDHR to the highest standards, to protect & promote respect for these rights and freedoms, and
to actively secure effective recognition of these rights for all persons. “Inherent, universal,
inalienable rights” applies, of course, to migrant workers too. It applies to all 2.6 million migrant
workers in Malaysia.
This is a basic premise that Tenaganita call on the Malaysian government to accept. They
also criticize on Malaysia’s action and response to numerous reports of serious rights abuses
against domestic workers here in Malaysia. Despite of the various abusement and complaint, The
Malaysian government, however, remains numb to action, and have not brought about any form
of comprehensive legal mechanism to actively protect and promote the rights of domestic
workers (who also have inalienable rights). When the majority of countries at the International
Labour Organisation (of which Malaysia is a member to) voted in resounding support for the
Domestic Workers Convention (known as ILO Convention 189) Malaysia abstained (despite
having over 200, 000 domestic workers currently in the country and active plans to recruit
more)83.
Four years ago, Tenaganita and the Malaysian Bar, along with several other members of civil
society, submitted a memorandum to the Malaysian government which consisted of a
comprehensive policy on the recruitment, placement and employment of and model contract for
82 Ibid.83 In the latest MOU between Malaysia and Indonesia on domestic workers, there are escape clauses built in thatonce more place the domestic worker in vulnerable state.
31
migrant workers in Malaysia. The comprehensive policy would be the basic framework for the
development of laws and mechanisms to actively protect and promote the rights of migrant
workers in the country. This open and direct call for this policy was made to the State in
recognition of the widespread and serious human rights violations against migrants in Malaysia.
Four years later, the Malaysian government has still yet to respond to this call from civil society
and the Malaysian Bar84.
On 12th March 2013, Tenaganita released a Press Statement titled: Global Action:International Migrants’ Day 2012, 131,000 People Demand That Malaysia Recognize DomesticWork As Work, in which as a global response to stop modern day slavery in Malaysia, over 131,000 signatures were collected by Women’s World Day Prayer – German Committee to urgeMalaysian government to immediately ratify and implement the ILO Convention No.189 onDecent Work for Domestic Workers85.
4) COLLABORATING WITH NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL
ORGANIZATION TO ENHANCE THE PROTECTION
Tenaganita has formed links with a number of regional and international organizations. For
example, several Tenaganita members have held executive positions in the Asia Pacific Forum
on Women, Law and Development (APWLD)86. APWLD had organized CSW-57 Preparatory
Workshop which had been attended Forty three women´s rights civil society representatives and
supportive UN agencies from 17 countries of the Asia Pacific region gathered in Bangkok,
Thailand. Key messages for CSW includes promoting the ratification and meaningful
implementation of all relevant international treaties, particularly those with inadequate
international support including ILO Convention 189 on Decent Work for Domestic Workers87. In
84 Clearing Misconceptions: The Truth About Migrants in Malaysia, 9th May 2012, available from:http://www.tenaganita.net/clearing-misconceptions-the-truth-about-migrants-in-malaysia/85 Domestic Workers Campaign Goes Global Signature Petition, 12th March 2013, available from:http://www.tenaganita.net/domestic-workers-campaign-goes-global-signature-petition/86 The APWLD is a regional NGO that seeks to enable women in the region to use law as an instrument of changefor the empowerment of women in their struggle for justice, peace, equality and development. It actively promotesthe concept of human rights as enshrined in UN conventions, such as CEDAW. The APWLD has a Labour andMigration program that has worked to develop an acceptable working definition of domestic work in order to worktowards state recognition of domestic work as work. Available from:http://www.apwld.org/about-apwld/
87 CSW-57 Preparatory Workshop: Asia Pacific Civil Society Statement to UNESCAP. Available from:http://www.apwld.org/latest-news/asia-pacific-civil-society-statement-to-unescap-csw-57-preparatory-workshop/
32
addition, Tenaganita receives strong support from CARAM Asia (Coordination of Action
Research on AIDS and Mobility)88.
5) PROVIDING SHELTER
In order to remain legally in Malaysia, migrant workers are required to have valid passports and
work permits. The Immigration Act, however, gives full power to the “employer” to obtain,
renew and cancel the work permit, while punishing the migrant for any violations of the work
permit. This is clearly problematic when migrants seek to take cases against their employers, as
their employers can (and commonly do) react by cancelling the work permit thereby rendering
the migrant ‘undocumented’ and subject to arrest, detention, whipping (if they are male) and
deportation.
The Immigration Act does have an allowance for workers to apply for a ‘special pass’, at
the cost of RM100 per month, and it can only be renewed three times. If the case is not resolved
within these 3 months, the migrant worker must return home. Based on Tenaganita’s experience
during the past 15 years shows that due process takes more than 6 months, sometimes up to 6
years before a case is resolved. While the case is being investigated and brought to court for
hearings, the worker is not allowed to work. The policy framework thus denies the worker’s
right to stay to get redress and denies the worker’s right to work to support him/herself (and pay
for the special pass) while the case is in court. Therefore, Tenaganita provides shelter for MDW
whom waiting for the court order. For example Tieng SaSa, a Cambodia residing together with
another eight maids, at the NGO Tenaganita in Kuala Lumpur, stuck in limbo as they wait for
their cases to be processed in Malaysia’s courts. As they do not have their work permit, they
need to find the shelter, if not, they are subjected to arrest or deportation89.
Since its inception in 1982, Woman’s Aid Organisation (WAO) began receiving several
isolated cases of domestic worker abuse. The first case, in 1988, was of Filipina MDW who had
been raped by her employer. Since that case, at least one MDW per year has sought refuge at
88 CARAM Asia is an NGO based in Malaysia with partner organizations throughout South and Southeast Asia.CARAM Asia seeks to “empower migrant workers and their communities through the promotion and protection oftheir rights and the creation of an enabling environment at all stages of migration to reduce HIV/AIDS vulnerability’available from: http://www.caramasia.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=301&Itemid=33889 Maids Seeks Justice in Malaysia, 9th May 2012, available from:http://www.tenaganita.net/maids-seek-justice-in-malaysia-2/
33
WAO for physical abuse. In 1999 alone, WAO provided shelter to 11 MDW who had been
abused, and provided counseling and advice to more. Shelter and support is vital. Once
employment is terminated, either by the worker or the employer, the woman loses her permit to
work in Malaysia and is unable to financially support herself90.
RECOMMENDATION
Looking at the laws and international standard, we found that Malaysia did not provide sufficient
protection for the MDW. To effectively address the issue of MDW, a comprehensive regional
approach involving collaboration among labour sending and receiving countries would be
needed. ASEAN is well positioned to lead efforts to establish common standard for the region.
Member states have already signed the ASEAN Declaration in the Protection and Promotion of
the Rights of Migrant Workers. The next step is to make this declaration legally binding. To this
end, ASEAN Framework Instrument on the Protection and Promotion of the Rights of the
Migrant Worker, which would be legally binding on both sending and receiving countries, is
currently being developed. When finalized, the Framework Instrument would serve as a blueprint
for countries in the region to introduce complementary laws and policies on MDW91.
Besides, a separate act is needed to govern the MDW to grant equal rights to domestic
workers just like any other rights given to other workers. Even if the government refused to enact
a separate act, Employment Act 1955 must be amended in order to protect MDW. They must get
a weekly paid day off, sick leave and maternity leave. Furthermore, the employers also are
required to give workers at least continuous period of eight hours of sleep, meals and separate
room. They also must be permitted to hold their own personal belongings such as their passport
and be given work as what they had agreed in the permit.
90 Migrant Domestic Worker Abuse, available from:http://www.wao.org.my/Migrant+Domestic+Workers_54_5_1.htm91Pau Khan Khup Hangzo and Alistair D.B. Cook,The Domestic Workers Convention 2011: Implications for migrant domestic workers in Southeast Asia, NST Insight April 2012, available from : http://www.rsis.edu.sg/nts/HTML-Newsletter/Insight/pdf/NTS_Insight_apr_1201.pdf
34
In addition, a one stop centre also should be established so that if MDW wanted to make
claim or report on their employer’s abusive action, they know where they should be headed to.
This one stop centre also should provide shelter for the MDW awaiting for their case to be
settled in the court.
With respect to the international law, Malaysia should sign and ratify the basic
international human rights treaties, as well as the recently passed ILO Convention on Decent
Work for Domestic Workers. Malaysia was recently appointed as a member of the United
Nations Human Rights Council (HRC),92 giving some activists reason to hope that the
government will now feel increased pressure to improve its own human rights system.93
Unfortunately, this hope has not been realized in other cases, with countries on the HRC, such as
Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, remaining some of the worst human rights abusers. Malaysia should
not follow in these countries’ abusive footsteps but rather should demonstrate its commitment to
human rights by signing the ICCPR and ICESCR and meeting those treaties’ obligations.
Malaysia should also sign the CMW as an important step towards protecting the rights
and interests of its migrant community. By doing this, and by going a step further and signing the
Convention for Decent Work for Domestic Workers, the Malaysian government could further
establish itself as the regional and burgeoning international leader that it seeks to be. In order for
these ratifications to have any actual value, however, they would have to be accompanied by
real, systematic change that indicates Malaysia’s active intent to comply with its human rights
and treaty obligations within its borders.
The UN Charter, the International Bill of Rights94 and the Vienna Declaration on Human
Rights impose on States the responsibility to cooperate in the realization of all human rights.
92 Malaysia Re-Elected to UN Human Rights Council, STAR ONLINE (May, 14, 2010), available athttp://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?sec=nation&file=/2010/5/14/nation/20100514184557
93 Stephanie Sta Maria, Malaysia Has ‘Excellent’ Human Trafficking System, HUM. RTS. WATCH (Aug. 2, 2010),available at http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2010/08/02/hrw-malaysia-has-excellent-human-trafficking-system?print(quoting PhilRobertson, Deputy Asia Director at Human Rights Watch).94 The International Bill of Rights consists of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the InternationalCovenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights andits two Optional Protocols.
35
There is a broadly-accepted understanding that States have the obligation to respect rights and
refrain from interfering with their enjoyment; to protect rights against violations, including
through ensuring adequate and accessible avenues of redress when rights are violated; and to
fulfill these rights by taking positive action, including through appropriate legislative and
administrative action, policies and the allocation of resources.95
95“What are human rights”; OHCHR; available athttp://www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/Pages/WhatareHumanRights.aspx.