
Malaysia asks Bangladesh to withdraw migrant labour probes
More than one million Bangladeshis have worked in Malaysia over the past two decades, with at least 945,000 living in the country as of October 2024. (Bernama pic)
PETALING JAYA : The government has asked Bangladesh to review and withdraw 'unsubstantiated allegations' of wrongdoing in labour migration between the two countries to improve Malaysia's rating in an annual US report on human trafficking.
'Allegations of human trafficking and money laundering – largely unsubstantiated – have impacted the Malaysian reputation,' Azman Yusof, secretary-general of the human resources ministry, wrote in a letter dated April 23.
Bloomberg News reviewed a copy of the letter, which was sent to Neyamat Ullah Bhuiyan, senior secretary of Bangladesh's ministry of expatriates' welfare and overseas employment. An official familiar with the letter confirmed its authenticity.
The two governments are in talks to restart the recruitment of Bangladeshi workers by Malaysian companies. Malaysia halted all such recruitment a year ago following widespread reports of workers who did not get the jobs they were promised despite paying thousands of dollars in fees, drawing criticism from the United Nations.
Both Bangladesh's police and anti-corruption agency have opened investigations into recruitment matters since then.
Azman asked Neyamat to review all pending allegations and withdraw those without merit, to ensure that Malaysia 'will preserve and enhance' its Trafficking in Persons (TIP) rankings, referring to the US state department's assessment. It ranks countries based on their efforts to acknowledge and fight human trafficking.
'In addition, we request to prevent the revival of dismissed cases through a formal mechanism,' Azman wrote.
Neyamat and Asif Nazrul, who is part of Bangladesh's Cabinet and oversees the expat ministry, both declined to comment on the letter. A representative for Malaysia's human resources ministry did not respond to a request for comment. It is not clear if Bangladesh has responded to the letter.
It was sent just weeks ahead of high-level meetings between Malaysian and Bangladeshi officials to discuss recruitment. Neyamat and Asif are poised to meet home minister Saifuddin Nasution Ismail and human resources minister Steven Sim in Putrajaya on Thursday.
Labour flow
Labour migration is one of Bangladesh's most important industries but can involve fees that saddle workers with debts and make them vulnerable to abuse as they go abroad.
Malaysia is one of their main destinations. More than one million Bangladeshis have gone to work in the Southeast Asian country over the past two decades, with at least 945,000 living there as of October 2024, government figures show. Human rights activists have documented numerous cases of Bangladeshi and other migrant workers facing abuse including debt bondage.
That has impacted Malaysia's human trafficking record. For more than a decade the US has said the country does not meet standards under the Trafficking Victims Protection Act. In eight of the last 10 years, the US has said Malaysia either is not making significant efforts to rectify this, or that its efforts are not sufficient to remedy the problem.
A low TIP ranking means a country can be restricted from accessing foreign assistance funding from the US. It might also face resistance by US representatives at the International Monetary Fund and other multilateral institutions for access to loans.
Last year, Bangladesh started investigations related to labour migration. Bangladesh's police in October asked the Malaysian government to arrest and extradite two businessmen as part of a probe into alleged money laundering, extortion and trafficking of migrant workers.
Bangladesh's Anti-Corruption Commission is also investigating a group of recruitment agency owners and former lawmakers over allegations of embezzlement related to labour migration to Malaysia, according to a local media report.
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