ID :
217370
Wed, 11/30/2011 - 11:26
Auther :
Shortlink :
https://oananews.org//node/217370
The shortlink copeid
Arrival Of 50,000 Maids In Accordance With Supply And Demand - Minister
SHAH ALAM (Malaysia), Nov 30 (Bernama) -- The hiring of 50,000 Indonesian
maids who are expected to arrive in Malaysia early next year is in accordance
with the actual supply and demand, said Human Resources Minister Dr S.
Subramaniam.
As such, he said, employers in the country were in no rush to seek the
services of maids though the moratorium on sending Indonesian maids to Malaysia
would be lifted Dec 1.
"Nobody forces anyone to take maids and nobody forces anyone to supply
maids. There must be somebody who needs the maid and somebody who supplies the
maid," he told a press conference after opening a seminar on the role of union
workers in making Malaysia a high-income nation, here, Wednesday.
Dr Subramaniam was responding to an English daily news article which quoted
Malaysian National Association of Employment Agencies (Pikap) deputy president
Aizan Lana as saying that Indonesian maids were not queueing up to come to
Malaysia although the moratorium would end Dec 1.
According to the Indonesian authorities, some 50,000 Indonesian maids were
due to arrive in Malaysia from mid-January next year once the moratorium is
lifted Dec 1.
The minister also hoped that all the 400 recruitment agencies registered in
Malaysia would agree to the new one-off agency fee to recruit an Indonesian maid
which was now set at RM4,511. (US$1=RM3.17)
On the National Wages Consultative Council, Dr Subramaniam reiterated that
the council was free from political interference.
"This is because the council functions as an independent body to review and
set minimum wages based on the tripartite principle involving the government,
employers and workers.
"Though there were numerous requests by the ruling and opposition parties to
place their representatives in the council, I said no to make sure the council
was free from political interference.
"I wanted an independent council where both workers and employers could
discuss and come up with a conclusion (on minimum wage)," he said.
In July 2011, the Malaysia's Lower House of Parliament has approved the
National Wages Consultative Council Bill 2011 to pave the way for the setting up
of the council.
It is made up of 25 members comprising six workers' representatives, six
employers' representatives, five government representatives, five independent
representatives, a chairman, a deputy chairman and a secretary from the Human
Resources Ministry.
On the move by the PKR-led Selangor government to implement a minimum
wage of RM1,500 for employees of its government-linked companies (GLCs), Dr
Subramaniam said: "It is always easy to implement a minimum wage policy for
such a group."
However, he said, it was a difficult task for the ministry to set a minimum
wage policy for all the sectors in the country as it required more planning and
discussions.
-- BERNAMA