Posted on 3 July 2012 - 09:22pm
Last updated on 4 July 2012 - 08:50am
Last updated on 4 July 2012 - 08:50am
PETALING JAYA (July 3, 2012): The
29 domestic helpers from East Java are being denied their full rights as
the employment contract which they signed with the maid agencies is
“different” from the one approved by both governments.
They were brought in by the Malaysian Association of Foreign Maid
Agencies (Papa) and have been working in Malaysia for a month.
Their arrival precedes a group of another four workers brought in by
the National Association of Employment Agencies (Pikap) on June 25,
reportedly with approval from the Indonesian Embassy here.
theSun sighted copies of both the employment contracts
allegedly issued to the 29 maids (Document A) and the one signed by the
subsequent four maids with their respective agencies (Document B).
Indonesian embassy spokesman Suryana Sastradiredja told theSun that he possessed similar copies of both employment contracts. “It is quite clear that there are missing elements or changes made to
the employment contract signed by the 29 workers,” said Suryana. He also confirmed that the contracts signed by the four maids were
legitimate and have been vetted by all relevant parties from both
governments.
Some of the major differences between the two documents are:
>> Unlike Document B, Document A has no official stamps of the
Indonesian Embassy and the Peninsular Malaysia Labour Department on all
pages.
>> Also, the last page of Document A was not signed and
stamped by the Indonesian National Body for Manpower Placement and
Protection head from the domestic helper’s origin district, or the
Indonesian Embassy Labour Attache Agus Triyanto.
>> According to Document A, an employer shall grant a domestic
helper four off-days in one month or pay RM25 in lieu of every off-day
not taken. In Document B, a domestic worker is entitled to one rest day
every week or be paid a sum equivalent to her monthly wage divided by 26
days.
>> It is not stated in Document A that an employer should
allow the domestic worker to keep her passport, documents or personal
possessions should they wish to do so.
>> It is also not stated wages should be banked in directly into the worker’s bank account.
Suryana pointed out these differences clearly contradicted agreements
reached under the memorandum of understanding signed between both
governments in May last year. The status of the 29 workers remained questionable as the Indonesian
government insisted that the agencies involved in bringing them in had
failed to comply with necessary procedures. On the other hand, Human Resources Ministry officials, including its
secretary-general Datuk Seri Zainal Rahim Seman, have maintained that
the agencies had done no wrong. Attempts to contact Papa president Jeffrey Foo have failed. He had previously claimed that the confusion was caused by a mere
“procedural mistake” as it has been three years since Indonesia imposed
the freeze on sending its citizens to work as maids in Malaysia.
1 comment:
If you've closed a contract with Hong Kong Domestic Helpers Agency already you still have a way to find out if their service goes beyond the extra mile.
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