Tuesday, 29 December 2020

New Hoong Fatt closes factory in Klang to contain Covid-19 infection

 KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 28 — New Hoong Fatt Holdings Bhd has temporarily closed the affected metal parts production factory of its wholly-owned subsidiary Auto Global Parts Industries Sdn Bhd (AGP) from December 25 until further notice to contain potential Covid-19 infection. 

In a filing with Bursa Malaysia today, the company said it had commenced its planned precautionary Covid-19 testing of all foreign and local employees of AGP on December 24 at its metal parts production factory in Meru, Klang, involving a total of 314 employees. “During the screening tests, 94 AGP employees were positive for Covid-19. “The affected employees are currently receiving appropriate treatment at designated government facilities as directed by the Health Ministry and all primary contacts of the affected employees have been identified,” it said. 

New Hoong Fatt said the management of AGP is undertaking disinfection and sanitisation procedures at the affected factory as well as the foreign employees’ hostels as per the guidelines provided by the ministry. In addition, the company has notified all employees as well as AGP’s suppliers and customers about the confirmed cases of Covid-19. “The company’s plastic parts production factory, which is situated in a different location, is currently in operation. 

The office operations are unaffected as the company’s management and supervisory staff have been working from home. “The company will continue to adhere to Covid-19 preventive standard operating procedures issued by the relevant authorities and work closely with the relevant authorities to ensure the health and safety of all its employees,” it added. — Bernama


Wednesday, 16 December 2020

PDRM: Scammers may be stealing your personal info from discarded delivery packages

 Monday, 14 Dec 2020 | 6:15 PM MYT



The Royal Malaysia Police (PDRM) is warning members of the public to be careful when throwing out empty delivery packaging, as scammers can easily steal their personal information from them and use their details for nefarious purposes.

Bukit Aman Commercial Crime Investigation Department director Comm Datuk Zainuddin Yaacob said this in a statement after a viral video depicted an unidentified fraudster retrieving the name, phone number and home address of a victim from a delivery package that had been discarded at a rubbish bin in a public area.

The scammer then began repeatedly contacting the victim in multiple attempts to extort money from them. The statement also revealed that the suspect later posed as an employee of a delivery company and showed up at the victim’s home, demanding that the victim’s family pay for a package that had allegedly been ordered but not yet paid for.

In order to convince the family member of the victim to make the payment, they were reportedly even told to scan a barcode before they could accept the ordered item.

Datuk Zainuddin said although the authorities have yet to receive any reports of such incidents, he said that investigations will be conducted under Section 420 of the Penal Code which stipulates that a ten-year prison sentence and caning will be carried out for such offences.

Members of the public are urged to lodge a police report to help with investigations if they have fallen victim to such scams.

He also reminded members of the public to be aware of how they discard their delivery packages or any envelopes that contain their personal details to prevent such untoward incidents. Family members who are at home should also be informed as to any expected deliveries and provided with the relevant details, such as the name of the delivery company and package payment status.

They are also reminded not to make any payments to delivery personnel without first verifying the details with the intended recipient.

https://www.thestar.com.my/tech/tech-news/2020/12/14/pdrm-scammers-may-be-stealing-your-personal-info-from-discarded-delivery-packages




Friday, 11 December 2020

Deputy D-G of govt department among five remanded over bribery

 PUTRAJAYA, Dec 11 — Five individuals including a deputy director-general with the Datuk title and a division secretary of a government department have been remanded for five days from today in connection with a bribery case involving the transporting of heavy grade oil in national waters.

The others remanded were three company directors of shipping companies including one with the title of Datuk Seri.

Magistrate Shah Wira Abdul Halim issued the remand order after hearing an application by the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) at the Putrajaya Magistrate's Court here today.


According to sources close to the investigations, the five individuals, aged between 35 and 54, were arrested when they turned up to give their statements at the MACC headquarters here last night.

The two senior government officials have allegedly abused their position and power by issuing exemption letters to certain companies without the knowledge and approval of the Transport Minister. 

The act was also carried out without the knowledge of the director-general of the department who had previously issued an order prohibiting the use of single-hull, double-bottom vessels in transporting heavy grade oil in Malaysian waters, the sources said.

The case is being investigated under Section 117 of the Criminal Procedure Code and Section 17 of the MACC Act 2009. — Bernama

Pakistani gets 30 days' jail, fined RM10,000 for bribing immigration officer

 KUALA LUMPUR: A Pakistani was sentenced to 30 days' jail and fined RM10,000 by the Sessions Court for bribing an immigration officer RM12,500 to release 20 of his countrymen and a Bangladeshi to leave the country.

The sentence was handed down to Muhammad Irfan, 34, after he pleaded guilty to the offence today.

Judge Rozina Ayob ordered the accused to serve another 30 days in jail if he fails to pay the fine.

Muhammad Irfan had earlier admitted to giving the money to Muhamad Faizal Ahmad, an Immigration Department officer attached to the Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KLIA) entry point control unit.



He was accused of bribing Muhammad Faizal who was an agent of the government in exchange for the release of 20 of his countrymen and a Bangladeshi national so they could return to their countries without any legal action taken against them.

He committed the offence in front of a restaurant in Putrajaya between 3.25pm and 3.32pm on Nov 16.

The offence under Section 214 of the Penal Code carries a maximum jail term of 10 years, or a fine or both, if convicted.

Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) deputy public prosecutor Mahadi Abdul Jumaat urged for a deterrent sentence saying that that public interest needed to be considered by the court in sentencing.

"The accused was lucky to have been offered an alternative charge, but public interest needs to be considered.

"The case involves national security as the accused had dared put himself on the line for the process of the release of the 21 foreigners who had overstayed in the country.

"The court should impose a jail term and a fine which reflects the seriousness of the offence committed by the accused," he said.

In pleading for leniency, the father of four who was unrepresented said he was the sole breadwinner of his family and his wife just gave birth two days ago.

"I plead for a lenient sentence. My baby was born two days ago and I still have not gotten the chance to settle my child's birth matters," he said.

Meanwhile, in a different court, Bangladeshi Ahmmed Md Rana, 37, who was also detained in the same operation was charged with bribing the same immigration officer RM8,500 for the purpose of releasing eight of his countrymen to return to their country without any legal action taken against them.

He was accused of committing the offence at the same place between 6.10pm and 6.15pm on Nov 16.

However, no plea was recorded as the accused did not understand the charge that was read to him in Bahasa Malaysia.

Judge Azura Alwi set this Monday for mention for an interpreter to read the charge to the accused in his native language.

She allowed Ahmmed RM20,000 bail in one surety pending mention.


https://www.nst.com.my/

Immigration man charged with taking RM21,500 bribes to let foreign offenders exit Malaysia

 



KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 11 ― An immigration officer was charged here today with receiving bribes totalling RM21,500 in exchange for helping foreigners who had committed immigration offences to leave Malaysia via the KLIA2 airport without having to face the law.

Mohd Al-Ridhuan Ahmad Zaini, 35, an immigration officer of the Grade KP19 at the Immigration Department of Malaysia pleaded not guilty and claimed trial to all 17 corruption charges under Section 16(a)(A) of the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission Act over the RM21,500 bribes received.

Mohd Al-Ridhuan, who was seen in court wearing a grey hooded jacket and dark blue jeans as well as a face mask, was accused of having received the bribes from an individual known as Nur Amamina Maulad Adnan through his wife's company's bank account in 17 separate transactions ranging from RM500 to RM1,500 each in the span of just a few months from late July to early November 2020.

Based on the 17 charges read out in court to Mohd Al-Ridhuan, he was said to have received bribes from Nur Amamina from a Maybank account to his wife Nurul Natasha Andrew’s company Entiti Maju Enterprise’s Bank Muamalat account in amounts of RM1,400 on July 25, RM1,400 (July 30), two transactions at RM1,500 each (July 31), RM700 (August 2), two transactions at RM1,500 each (August 5) and RM700 (November 11).

He was also accused of having received bribes from Nur Amamina from a CIMB bank account to the same Bank Muamalat account via two transactions at RM1,500 each on August 7, RM1,000 (August 7), RM800 (August 7), and two transactions at RM1,500 each on October 10, and via another CIMB Bank account owned by Kedai Gunting Rambut Amsyar again to the same Bank Muamalat account with two transactions of RM1,500 each on October 10 and RM500 (October 10).

All of the 17 corruption charges carry a penalty of a maximum 20-year jail, and a fine not less than five times the bribe or RM10,000 whichever is higher upon conviction.

Deputy public prosecutor Wan Shaharuddin Wan Ladin then offered bail of RM80,000 with one guarantor, acknowledging that the presumption of innocence until proven guilty applies to Mohd Al-Ridhuan's case but insisted on a high bail amount.

“If you look at the charges today, the modus operandi is the same and the offences said to be committed is serious, not just because of the sentence that will be imposed by this court if he is found guilty, but the way it was committed is that of a traitor to this country,” Wan Shaharuddin argued.

Wan Shaharuddin also asked for three additional bail conditions, namely for the accused to report every month to MACC's headquarters, to surrender his passport to the court, and to not disturb the witnesses in the case.

Mohd Al-Ridhuan's lawyer Harcharanjit Singh however asked for a lower bail amount of RM20,000 to secure his client's attendance, due to his client's continued cooperation to the MACC by attending each of the investigation sessions and also the court date today.

Harcharanjit also highlighted that his client had three young children aged seven, five and two and that the client's wife  ― who is running her own business ― has serious medical problems including cyst problems and with a private hospital document showing a change yesterday in the cyst condition which required medical attention.

Harcharanjit confirmed that his client was still working with the Immigration Department and was never working on the frontlines, and confirmed that he had not been suspended from work and was receiving his pay as usual and had just two days ago reported to the Kuala Lumpur branch from the Putrajaya headquarters.

Harcharanjit did not object to the three additional bail conditions.

Wan Shaharuddin then responded by suggesting a bail amount of between RM20,000 to RM40,000 in light of the widespread attention from the public and media over these types of cases.

Sessions Court judge Rozina Ayob pointed out that the bail amount is just to secure attendance and not to sentence the accused, before granting bail of RM30,000 with a Malaysian guarantor, and with the three additional conditions.

The judge said Mohd Al-Ridhuan must report to the MACC headquarters every month, and give up his passport to the court and be put on the blacklist from travelling abroad until the end of the case, while sternly warning that any attempt to threaten or harass witnesses could result in the bail being revoked.

“If the court receives any complaint, especially with regards to the wife who is a potential witness... once I hear any official report lodged, the bail can be revoked. Any single official complaint ― there must be a police report as well ― that you disturb any witnesses including your wife who may be a witness, the bail can be revoked,” the judge said.

The judge said this does not mean that the couple would have to live separately or would be barred from talking to each other, but stressed that both should be aware of the limits and asked the wife who was present in court not to interfere in the case.

The judge then fixed January 12 for the case to be mentioned again.

Mohd Ridhuan is one of those nabbed in the special sting operation Ops Selat which busted a syndicate involving immigration officers. Luxury cars namely a Rolls-Royce Phantom, a Ford Mustang, a Range Rover and an Audi were reportedly seized during the operation.

On November 28, national news agency Bernama reported that 65 individuals have been arrested under Ops Selat, involving 39 immigration officers, 17 agents and nine civilians.

Separately, Pakistan national Muhammad Irfan pleaded guilty before Sessions Court judge Rozina over his November 16 giving of a RM12,500 bribe to an immigration officer to arrange for 21 foreigners who had overstayed in Malaysia to slip out via the KLIA airport without having to face legal action.

Irfan was sentenced with a 30-day jail term from today, and a fine of RM10,000 or a further 30-day jail if he is unable to pay the fine.

https://www.malaymail.com/news/malaysia/2020/12/11/immigration-man-charged-with-taking-rm21500-bribes-to-let-foreign-offenders/1930982

Tuesday, 8 December 2020

Restricted Sector for application for Employment Pass



Restricted sector for foreign involvement under the Guidelines on Foreign Participation in the Distributive Trade Services Malaysia 

  • Supermarket / mini market (less than 3,000 square sales floor area) 
  • Provision shop / general vendor 
  • Convenience store (that opens for business for 24 hours) 
  • News agent and miscellaneous goods store 
  • Medical hall (inclined towards traditional alternative medicines plus general dry foodstuff) 
  • Fuel station with convenience store 
  • Fuel station without convenience store 
  • Permanent wet market store 
  • Permanent pavement store 
  • National Strategic Interest 
  • Textile
  • Restaurant (non exclusive)
  • Bistro, 
  • Jewelry shops 
  • Others 

CHECKLIST - EMPLOYMENT PASS Category 1, 2 & 3 (New and Renewal)



Checklist for the document required for applying Employment Pass in ESD (Expatriate Service Division)

  1. Resume
    • Preferably in Microsoft Word
    • Include total professional working experience. 
    • Detailed and updated information, current and previous employer on the employment history with brief job description. 

Monday, 7 December 2020

Different Types of Visa available under ESD


 


Please find here the details for the different types of Visa available under ESD

EMPLOYMENT PASS ( CATEGORY I ) 

Eligibility criteria: 

  • Hiring company successfully registered with ESD. 
  • Applicant must earn a basic salary of minimum RM15,000 per month; AND Applicant must have an employment contract valid for a minimum of 24 months 

COMPANY ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA: ESD



Please ensure the company who wants to register themselves in the ESD system, should compile to the below terms and conditions set by Immigration of Malaysia

Friday, 4 December 2020

Sony’s plant in Penang to close after 36 years, 3,400 workers affected


December 3, 2020 9:08 PM

GEORGE TOWN: The Sony manufacturing plant in Penang, which has been making audio products such as the Walkman for the export and local markets, is set to close next September, after 36 years in operation.

State International and Domestic Trade Committee chairman Halim Hussain said with Sony’s impending closure of its plant in Perai, close to 3,400 workers will be laid off.

Speaking to FMT, he said 1,800 of these workers are locals. The other 1,600 are foreigners.

“Some of these employees will be transferred to Sony’s factory in Bangi. The state government will be helping those who have been retrenched to find new jobs,” he added.

Although Sony has yet to release a statement, Halim said the plant will be closing in stages and will fully cease operations next September.

“This is part of Sony’s plan to restructure its operations globally.”

He believed that the closure is a necessary transitory process, given the fierce competition in the multinational manufacturing industry.

Halim said that with the state drawing RM10 billion in foreign direct investments (FDI) this year, more than 9,000 jobs will be generated in the near future and there was hope for those retrenched.

“The state government will not leave these retrenched workers stranded. With the 9,000 jobs generated, there will always be work for them to find.”


 

Saravanan: Accommodation for over 90% of foreign workers in Malaysia not in compliance with Act 446


 

KUALA LUMPUR (Dec 3): Some 91.1% or 1.4 million foreign workers in the country are provided with accommodation that does not comply with provisions under the Workers’ Minimum Standards of Housing and Amenities Act 1990 or Act 446.

Human Resources Minister Datuk Seri M Saravanan said he found the statistics “very worrying”, especially with the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic.

"The government had received applications for a certificate of accommodation for only 143,587 or 8.89% of the 1.6 million [registered] foreign workers in the country as of Oct 31.

"This situation clearly shows that employers and providers of centralised accommodation for the 1.4 million foreign workers in Malaysia still fail to apply for the certificate from the Department of Labour of Peninsular Malaysia (JTKSM)," he said.

He told reporters this at a special press conference here today, which was also attended by Senior Minister (Security Cluster) Datuk Seri Ismail Sabri Yaakob.

Saravanan said the enforcement of Act 446 would be carried out continuously, and action would be taken against errant employers.

"Since the enforcement of Act 446 on Sept 1, JTKSM has conducted 1,850 inspections, involving 1,813 employers and 37 centralised accommodation providers throughout the peninsula and the Federal Territory of Labuan.

"JTKSM is targetting 25,000 inspections by 2021," he said.

Certificate of accommodation a prerequisite before hiring new foreign workers from July 1 next year


Meanwhile, Ismail Sabri, who is also the chairman of the Cabinet Committee on Foreign Workers, said the certificate of accommodation will be a prerequisite for employers who intend to hire new foreign workers, effective from July 1 next year.

 "Before an employer makes an application to bring in foreign workers, the employer must obtain the certificate from the Ministry of Human Resources (MoHR) to enable the Immigration Department to issue a visa.

"This means, before foreign workers arrive in the country, employers are required to make available accommodation that complies with Act 446. Otherwise, the foreign workers would be [regarded as] illegal immigrants,” he added.

Ismail Sabri reminded employers that Act 446 not only involves foreign workers, but also includes local workers.

"The focus of Act 446 at the moment is on foreign workers due to a high number of Covid-19 cases involving them," he added.

 Ismail Sabri said the second meeting of the Special Committee on the Coordination of Foreign Workers, held yesterday, also agreed for the Ministry of Housing and Local Government to expedite the approval of applications by employers to build workers’ quarters.

https://www.theedgemarkets.com/article/saravanan-accommodation-over-90-foreign-workers-malaysia-not-compliance-act-446

Malaysian man’s pregnant, foreign wife refused entry at Johor border, faces deportation

 Wednesday, 02 Dec 2020 09:13 PM MYT

KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 2 — A seven-month pregnant Chinese national married to a Malaysian living in Singapore has been barred from entering Malaysia and now risk deportation back to her country.

The letter refusing entry to the 27-year old woman, who asked to be known as Mrs Yong, stated the rejection was done under Section 8 (3) of the Immigration Act 1959/1963.

The Malaysian husband, who asked to be identified as Yong, said the refusal of entry on Monday (Nov 30) at the Customs, Immigration and Quarantine (CIQ) complex in Bukit Chagar has put the couple in a quandary as his wife cannot stay for long in Singapore. 

“Previously, she was working in Singapore holding a work permit but due to Singaporean rules and regulations, (non-Malaysian) foreign workers cannot deliver in this country. Since she’s pregnant, the work permit had to be cancelled,” he told Bernama in a phone interview.

Yong said he could not sponsor her as a dependent on his employment pass because, as a store manager, he did not meet the minimum fixed monthly salary requirement of S$6,000.

Neither can he accompany her across the border, as he did not want to risk losing his job as he would have to be gone for a month due to quarantine requirements.

After she was turned away at the border, Singapore issued her a 14-day special pass to stay in the country. Upon expiry, she will have to leave or be deported.

Yong, who hails from Kluang, Johor, said Malaysia was their best hope not to be separated and to ensure the safety of their unborn child as his wife would not have to travel very far to be with his family, who will be taking care of her. 

He said his wife had all the requisite documents for entry, including MyTravelPass permission to enter, a Letter of Undertaking guaranteeing payment of Covid-19 quarantine costs and their marriage certificate, which they registered with the Malaysian government. 

He added that his wife did not have a Long-Term Social Visit Pass (LTSVP), however, saying his wife planned to apply for it once she was in Malaysia.

 


Immigration Department of Visa, Pass and Permit Director Dr Syahmi @ Muhammad Syahmi Jaafar said not having a LTSVP should not be a reason to deny the woman or any other foreign spouses entry should they have permission.

"It’s a rare case to reject foreign spouses,” he said, adding the government was trying hard to help Malaysians to reunite with their foreign family members. 

He said he would investigate what happened while also expressing confidence in his officers. 

Malaysia has tightened its entry restrictions since March due to the Covid-19 pandemic. Foreign spouses without the LTSVP, or spouse visa, have been affected especially as they were not allowed to enter until August, when the government allowed foreign spouses and children without the LTSVP.

Recently, the government eased restrictions further to allow in foreign spouses from 23 banned countries.

Section 8 (3) of the Immigration Act of 1959/1963 lists a variety of prohibited immigrants, including those who cannot support themselves, with a criminal record, suffering from mental illness and planning to overthrow the government. — Bernama

Thursday, 3 December 2020

3 foreign worker agents nabbed in immigration syndicate probe

November 25, 2020 2:41 PM




PETALING JAYA: Three foreign worker agents have been arrested by the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) as the anti-graft agency continues its crackdown on an immigration syndicate.

A source told FMT that the three individuals, between the ages 30 to 66, were detained to facilitate investigations into the falsifying of entry and exit stamps at KLIA and klia2.

The trio, one of whom is also a lawyer, was detained in Kuala Lumpur yesterday evening.

All three were remanded at the Putrajaya Magistrates’ Court this morning under Section 117 of the Criminal Procedure Code.

The MACC has detained 59 people so far as part of the ongoing Ops Selat – 34 immigration officers, 15 foreign worker agents and 10 civilians who allegedly acted as “mule accounts”.

An immigration deputy director based at KLIA was also arrested by the MACC.

It was previously reported that the syndicate catered to employers of foreign workers who wanted them to remain here or return to their home country.

The syndicate had two modus operandi, the first being a “flying passport” for those who came to Malaysia using social visas but were working here illegally.

The agents of the workers would collect their passports and pay the immigration officers to stamp their passports to indicate that they had left the country after three months and re-entered legally.

Its other modus operandi was “setting counters” for migrants who have been blacklisted for immigration offences.

The migrants would go to these particular counters at airports and pay up to RM6,000 to be allowed to leave the country even though they had been blacklisted from travelling.

Immigration officer nabbed over alleged bribes to free detainees

 PETALING JAYA: The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) has arrested an immigration officer for allegedly receiving bribes in exchange for the release of detainees, FMT has learnt.



A well-placed source said Selangor MACC arrested the officer for allegedly asking for a RM22,000 bribe to release two Chinese nationals who were detained last month for utilising fake stamps to enter and exit the country.

The 26-year-old officer, who is with the KLIA operations division, was detained at 7.45pm yesterday after he was said to have received the bribe at a petrol station near the airport.

The source said this case is not related to the Ops Selat sting operation, which has seen 39 immigration officers detained, adding that this officer worked alone and had allegedly done this frequently.

“The corruption at KLIA has become a pandemic and is worrying. This is an issue of national safety. Corrupt officers on duty ease the entry and exit of problematic undocumented migrants,” the source said.

“There’s no longer any need to go through illegal routes or to brave rough seas to enter Malaysia. It’s better to enter through KLIA or klia2. It’s easier, faster and safer.”

The source said the officer was caught following the arrest of a 40-year-old “agent”, who was found with the money, at noon yesterday.

After interrogations, the “agent” revealed that the money was for a KLIA immigration officer, the source said.

“Their modus operandi is that immigration officers will give these agents the details of any Chinese national detained for immigration offences at KLIA. The agent’s job is to contact their families in China to ask for bribes for the detainees’ release.

“The families in China will then call their friends in Malaysia to help prepare the money and hand it over to the agent,” the source added.

Selangor MACC director Alias Salim confirmed the arrest and said the case is being investigated under Section 16 of the MACC Act.

https://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/category/nation/2020/12/03/immigration-officer-nabbed-over-alleged-bribes-to-free-detainees/

Covid-19 screening for foreign workers: Socso urges clinics, hospitals to charge minimum service fee on employers

 



KUALA LUMPUR, Dec 3 — The Social Security Organisation (Socso) has urged clinics and hospitals to charge a minimum service fee on employers who want to do a Covid-19 screening test on their foreign workers.

Socso Prevention, Medical and Rehabilitation Division head Dr Azlan Darus said the organisation would only bear the cost of test kits and the service fees would be set by the clinics and hospitals.

“However, Socso proposes that clinics and hospitals charge a minimum fee as part of their corporate social responsibility initiatives to curb the spread of the Covid-19 pandemic,” he said in a statement here today.

Dr Azlan said following the announcement by Senior Minister (Security Cluster) Datuk Seri Ismail Sabri Yaakob on November 27, Socso would only bear the cost of RTK-Antigen test kits and no longer provide screening subsidies or receive payment claims from employers, clinics or hospitals.

He said to reduce the cost of screening tests, Socso has obtained the supply of test kits directly from suppliers and distributed them to clinics and hospitals participating in the Covid-19 Screening Programme for Foreign Workers.

Apart from that, Dr Azlan said Socso also welcomed all private healthcare facilities to participate in the programme.

“Interested clinics or hospitals can register at sihat.perkeso.gov.my. For successful registration, Socso will provide the test kit and monitor the process of the screening test. — Bernama


Govt panel suggests companies send back detained migrants in return for new workers





PUTRAJAYA, Dec 3 — The government could lift the embargo on foreign labour hire if companies are willing to fund the deportation costs of undocumented migrants, Home Minister Datuk Seri Hamzah Zainuddin said today.

The proposal, subject to Cabinet approval, is a trade off aimed at cutting detention costs, Hamzah said.
“You send back one, we let you hire one,” he told reporters here.

The Home Ministry is one of two ministries that form a committee tasked to revamp the migrant worker hiring system.

The Human Resources Ministry, the panel’s co-chair, froze foreign labour hiring in July in a bid to boost employment for locals.

The Covid-19 outbreak had left up to 100,000 jobless by September, the ministry revealed in Parliament earlier this week, although some independent economists have estimated it could be more than four times the official figures.

The committee’s proposal likely came on the back of pressure from industries reeling from the hiring ban. Cheap foreign labour form the core workforce for key sectors like construction and agriculture.

Hamzah suggested the proposed trade-off as a win-all solution for both the government and private sector.

“We thought this was good in a way [for them] to help the government so we can reduce the cost [to maintain] the depots,” he said.

Rights groups estimated there are over 15,000 migrants currently held in the main detention depots nationwide.

Hamzah said the government could allow a quarter of them to be rehired. He was unclear when asked why the rest were not eligible for employment.

“Only 15 per cent are suitable for employment, the rest can’t be rehired because of many reasons,” he said.

“For example, some of them are caught stealing, we can’t allow them to work. Then others have committed various immigration offences,” the minister added.

close the employment of foreign workers for the frozen sub-sectors of metal/scrap and recycling

 






PUTRAJAYA (Dec 3): The multi-tier foreign worker levy system, which was scheduled to take effect on Jan 1, 2021, has been postponed to July 1, 2021, said Home Minister Datuk Seri Hamzah Zainudin.

He said the move was taken after considering the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on industry growth and business operations.

“Besides that, the meeting also decided to review the levy rates for the multi-tier levy system for each sector to ensure the effectiveness of its implementation later,” he said after a meeting with Human Resources Minister Datuk Seri M Saravanan on foreign workers management here today.

Hamzah said the inaugural meeting also agreed to the proposal to close the employment of foreign workers for the frozen sub-sectors of metal/scrap and recycling.

He said the foreign worker's reduction and termination plan in the sub-sectors would be implemented in stages in the next three years.

Hamzah said the justification for the closure was based on the priority to hire local workers, reducing licence holders in the respective sub-sectors and transforming the industry towards mechanisation and automation.

“Actually, the sub-sectors have been frozen for a long time. However, we want to inform those who are still working that they are given three more years (to work) and after that, they are not allowed to renew their work pass,” he said.

Hamzah said there were 2,931 foreign workers (13.9 per cent) in the sub-sectors, compared to 21,154 locals (86.1 per cent).

Of the total, he said, 1,540 were workers from India, Bangladesh (676), Indonesia (208), Myanmar (129) and others (93).

Meanwhile, Saravanan said so far, the Department of Labour of Peninsular Malaysia (JTKSM) had received 134 applications from employers under the Illegal Immigrant Recalibration Plan, involving 19,734 applications for replacement of foreign workers.

From the total, Saravanan said, 76 were from the construction sector involving 6,470 foreign workers; manufacturing (34 applications, 9,292 workers); agriculture (17 applications, 353 workers) and farming (seven applications, 3,619 workers).

“Employers who wish to participate in the programme can contact JTKSM and the Immigration Department for further details. The programme aims to assist the impacted industry in overcoming labour shortages and sustaining their business,” he said.

The programme is a collaboration between the Human Resources Ministry and Home Ministry through JTKSM and Immigration Department which began on Nov 16.

https://www.theedgemarkets.com/article/multitier-levy-system-foreign-workers-postponed-july-2021

https://www.malaymail.com/news/malaysia/2020/12/03/multi-tier-levy-system-for-foreign-workers-postponed-to-july-2021-says-mini/1928603



Wednesday, 2 December 2020

Check list : New Company Registration in ESD Portal



Documents Required :-

1. SSM FORMS - color scan/copy

  • printed by Mydata, 
  • certified true by ssm. 
  • Date of printing should be less than 1 year old
Note: Please check below highlighted link for the guidelines to check whether the company is eligible to register in the ESD system company-eligibility-criteria-esd.html