logo
Bangladeshi migrant workers in Malaysia seek unpaid wages from supplier to Japanese companies

Bangladeshi migrant workers in Malaysia seek unpaid wages from supplier to Japanese companies

The Hindu22-05-2025

Around 280 Bangladeshi migrant workers in Malaysia are demanding hundreds of thousands of dollars in back wages and other money owed to them after their former employer, a plastic parts supplier to big Japanese companies, closed down.
The workers at Kawaguchi Manufacturing's factory in Port Klang, Malaysia's largest port city, were left stranded when the company withheld their wages for up to eight months before shutting down late last year. The workers have filed complaints in Malaysia and back home in Bangladesh.
Such disputes have become a diplomatic sore point between Bangladesh and Malaysia, drawing scrutiny on a small but powerful group of recruitment agencies and middlemen who monopolise such jobs. Asif Nazrul, an advisor to Bangladesh's Expatriate Welfare Ministry, met with Malaysia's Home Minister Steven Sim Chee Keong in Kuala Lumpur last week. Officials were due to meet again on Wednesday in Dhaka, the Bangladesh capital.
The interim government that took over in Bangladesh after the ouster of former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has placed a higher priority on the plight of migrant workers who often get trapped in debt after paying exorbitant recruitment fees to work in dismal conditions for little pay.
Labour advocates say the situation is worsening as more people from across South Asia, sometimes losing their livelihoods owing to climate change, seek work in Southeast Asia. Trade tensions between the U.S. and China have accelerated that trend as factories move from China to places in Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam and elsewhere.
Workers allege abuse
The workers have received just 2,51,000 ringgit ($USD 58,101) of the more than three million ringgit ($6,94,444) in back wages that a Malaysian labour tribunal ordered Kawaguchi to pay. Many have found new jobs but still have heavy debts after borrowing money to pay hefty recruitment fees.
The workers allege that they were sometimes required to work without breaks for 24-hour shifts and on holidays with no paid overtime, making plastic casings for televisions and air-conditioners. They say Kawaguchi confiscated their passports, provided inadequate housing and delayed their visa renewals.
The factory shut down in December, soon after Sony Group and Panasonic Holdings Corp., two of Kawaguchi's main customers, halted their orders in response to the allegations against their supplier.
After the factory closed, the workers say Malaysian officials forcibly sent many of them to another city some 360 km away to toil in new factory jobs without giving them any information. They were kept in filthy shipping containers converted into dormitories. Another 80 workers were told to work in palm oil plantations — but refused.
Most made their way back to Port Klang to seek work and chip away at the debts that have been accumulating. It took nearly three months for them to get permission from the Malaysian government to switch jobs. The Associated Press got no response to multiple requests to Kawaguchi for comment. Malaysia's Labour Department also didn't respond to requests for comment.
Wider trends across Asia
Factories in Malaysia and other countries in Southeast Asia rely on migrant workers, often from Bangladesh, Myanmar and Nepal, to fill labour-intensive jobs in manufacturing, plantations, or construction that local workers won't perform for the wages offered.
'The cost of recruitment and migration from Bangladesh to Malaysia is among the most expensive in the world,' according to the International Labor Organisation's office in Bangladesh.
The official recruitment fee is about $650 per worker. But all the workers at Kawaguchi said they paid nearly $5,000. The loans they took to pay such sums has pushed them into debt bondage as they labour to pay off ever mounting debts.
In 2023, Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said Malaysia should end use of recruitment agents, describing the system as 'modern slavery.' But a 2024 study of Bangladeshi workers in Malaysia found that more than 70% had spent at least half of their wages to pay off recruitment debts. Most have at least two loans and many said they were misled about their wages.
Nearly everyone who migrates overseas from Bangladesh, one of the countries most- affected by climate change, has suffered at least one form of modern slavery, like withholding of wages or physical violence, according to a study by the London-based think tank International Institute for Environment and Development.
Seeking help from Japan
Panasonic, Sony and Daikin, three of Kawaguchi's former main customers among about a dozen, agreed to cover an estimated $1.3 million of the recruitment costs paid by the workers. It's unclear how much each company is contributing.
"This doesn't cover all the workers' costs, including interest rates of up to 30% they must pay on their loans," said Andy Hall, a British labour activist who has been helping the workers. Many have also defaulted on their debts after going months without wages. 'They're absolutely desperate and they're at very high risk of falling into even worse situations,' Andy Hall said.
Daikin settled with the workers, agreeing to pay them more, although it says it accounted for only 1% to 2% of Kawaguchi's orders. The air- conditioner manufacturer told AP it was working with human rights groups to resolve any remaining issues.
Panasonic said it was 'proportionally reimbursing the recruitment fees' paid by workers and had asked Kawaguchi to correct labour violations. It said it tried to support Kawaguchi but had to disengage from the company owing to its financial woes and anticipated production problems.
Sony told AP its code of conduct prohibits abusive labour practices in its supply chain. After investigating, it demanded corrective measures. 'When our demands were not satisfied, we terminated our relationship with this supplier,' it said.
The workers are seeking more help and lawyer Terry Collingsworth of the U.S.-based International Rights Advocates, who is representing them, said they were in discussions with Sony and Panasonic.
"We are not asking you to admit liability. We are asking you to comply with your public commitment to remediate when one of your suppliers violates the human rights of its workers,' said a January 16 letter from Collingsworth to Sony and Panasonic.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

LeT, Jaish Tap Bangladesh Radical Networks, Use Campuses To Target Indian Students
LeT, Jaish Tap Bangladesh Radical Networks, Use Campuses To Target Indian Students

News18

time33 minutes ago

  • News18

LeT, Jaish Tap Bangladesh Radical Networks, Use Campuses To Target Indian Students

Last Updated: Top intelligence sources reveal Bangladesh-based groups are now providing legitimate access to LeT and Jaish in universities, where they target Indian students for radicalisation Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) and Jaish-e-Mohammed have joined hands with radical groups in Bangladesh, opening a new front to radicalise Indian youth, CNN-News18 has learnt from top intelligence sources. A recent speech by Saifullah Kasuri, aka Khalid, in Kasur, Lahore, which has gone viral and is now circulating among radical groups, referenced Bengal and the division of the region on May 28. The speech is being actively used in radical circles to fuel propaganda. Bangladesh-based groups are now providing legitimate access to LeT and Jaish in universities, where they target Indian students for radicalisation. These India-based groups are also collaborating with Jamaat-e-Islami, creating a cross-border ideological network. LeT's exploitation of Bangladeshi universities is built on three key pillars: ideological alignment with local radicals, institutional decay, and cross-border impunity. Backed by ISI, LeT operates through multi-layered strategies combining ideological networks, institutional vulnerabilities, and cross-border operational logistics. LeT coordinates with Jamaat's student wing Islami Chhatra Shibir to infiltrate campuses. Shibir grants access to student networks, hostels, and Islamic study circles, which are then used for recruitment. Following the restoration of Jamaat-e-Islami's legitimacy post-2024, this access has become more streamlined. Groups such as Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami Bangladesh (HuJI-B) and Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB), both linked to LeT, operate madrasas near universities. These madrasas indoctrinate students with Wahhabi-Salafi ideologies, framing education as jihad for Islamic revival. UK-based front organisations have also funded radical madrasas that later recruit university students. Shibir members invite Indian students into Islamic study circles, blending religious discussions with LeT propaganda videos. Events at the University of Dhaka have glorified Kashmir terrorists killed as martyrs. LeT's attack footage from India is shared through encrypted apps such as Telegram and Signal, with videos from incidents like the Pahalgam attacks being circulated to incite anti-India sentiments. Radical groups offer scholarships, flood relief, and financial aid to economically vulnerable Indian students. Following the 2024 floods, Jamaat distributed aid along with radical literature. Senior student 'mentors" isolate Indian youth, presenting radicalisation as identity preservation, while enforcing conservative dress codes such as beards and veils to build group loyalty. LeT is also using Bangladesh as a transit hub. Indian students radicalised in Dhaka or Chittagong are sent to LeT camps in Pakistan via Myanmar or Nepal, often under the guise of educational tours. They portray India as oppressing Muslims, leveraging events like the Citizenship Amendment Act (CAA) and incidents of communal violence, such as the 2023 temple vandalism to validate jihadist narratives. The post-2024 interim government in Bangladesh lifted bans on Jamaat-e-Islami and allied groups, appointing radicals to key positions, including the Hizb-ut-Tahrir founder as Home Secretary. This has enabled LeT affiliates like Ansarullah Bangla Team (ABT) to operate openly on campuses. Government concessions to Hefazat-e-Islam, such as compulsory Islamic education, allow madrasas to teach jihadist ideologies unchallenged. Universities have also adopted gender-segregated curricula, normalising extremist norms. Bangladesh's lax NGO oversight, coupled with hundi remittances and money laundering—both significant contributors to its GDP—allow LeT to mask funding as charitable donations. LeT receives funds via NGOs from the Middle East, Gulf, Saudi Arabia, and Kuwait, under the pretext of reviving Islamic heritage and campus charities. Radicalised students returning to India are deployed as operatives. HuJI-B, JMB, and LeT proxies maintain around 40 sleeper cells in Assam and Nagaland, using Bangladesh-trained Indians to carry out attacks. LeT has also utilised Bangladeshi routes for India-bound operations. The 2025 Pahalgam attack involved a LeT operative who had met a Bangladeshi official prior to the operation. Anti-minority violence in Bangladesh — where nearly 2,200 Hindu-targeted incidents were reported in 2024 — spills over into India, intensifying Hindu-Muslim tensions and aiding in jihadist recruitment.

India crowned top destination for stock compounders, says BofA; lists 9 structural themes
India crowned top destination for stock compounders, says BofA; lists 9 structural themes

Economic Times

time41 minutes ago

  • Economic Times

India crowned top destination for stock compounders, says BofA; lists 9 structural themes

Bank of America Securities sees India as best for stock growth due to nine factors. India's economy is growing fast. According to the International Monetary Fund, India is projected to be the fastest-growing major economy in 2025 and 2026. Over the past 30 years, Indian markets have delivered USD-based returns at a 7% CAGR, second only to the U.S. Notably, this performance has been driven primarily by earnings growth rather than valuation increases, distinguishing India on the global stage. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Nine Structural Themes Fueling India's Growth Outlook BofA outlined nine long-term themes that make it constructive on India's equity outlook: Infrastructure Boom: India is on track to add more infrastructure between FY15 and FY30 than it did in the previous 65 years, with a projected 3.25x economic multiplier according to an RBI study. Productivity Gains: Improvements in logistics, energy efficiency, and capital-output ratios suggest a productivity renaissance akin to the 2003–07 boom years. Digitization: With more than 900 million internet users and ultra-low data costs, India has witnessed a 140x surge in digital transactions in eight years, fueling a fast-growing digital economy and the fourth-largest venture capital ecosystem globally. Financialization: Over 90% of Indians now have bank accounts, up from 35% in 2011, but formal credit penetration remains low at 11–13%, providing significant room for expansion in financial services. Household Savings Strength: Households contribute over 60% to the national savings pool. Improving balance sheets and easing inflation are expected to further support domestic capital formation. Discretionary Consumption Shift: As per capita income nears $5,000 by 2030, the share of discretionary consumption is expected to rise to 43%, up from the current 36%, driven by premiumization and a growing middle class. Formalization Push: Reforms like GST, UPI and e-invoicing are driving growth in the formal sector, broadening the tax base and creating scale benefits for organized players. Improving External Position: PLI schemes, labor reforms, and infrastructure investment could transform India from a current account deficit country into one running surpluses. Decarbonization Momentum: India has already invested $216 billion in clean energy over the last decade, and is expected to deploy another $270 billion by FY30. Market Outlook: Long-Term Conviction, Short-Term Caution In a powerful long-term endorsement of India's equity markets, Bank of America ( BofA ) Securities has ranked the country as the world's top hunting ground for stock compounders , driven by a confluence of nine structural growth engines. While bullish on India's decade-long trajectory, the brokerage struck a cautious tone on near-term market prospects, citing elevated valuations and global is expected to be the fastest-growing large economy in 2025 and 2026, according to the International Monetary Fund. Over the last three decades, the Indian market has delivered USD-based returns of 7% CAGR—second only to the US. More significantly, these returns have been powered by earnings growth rather than valuation expansion, setting India apart of America's strategist, Amish Shah said the confluence of nine structural drivers is likely to position India for sustained economic and corporate earnings growth. He emphasized that India ranks as the top country globally in providing a high number of stock compounders, and that this trend is likely to persist.'Hence, India ranks as the top country globally to provide high number of stock compounders, a trend we expect to continue. However, we are cautious on markets near term as valuations seem full & markets are ignoring risks of likely slowing global growth,' Shah wrote in a strategy highlighted that India's outperformance is built on strong fundamentals, regulatory consistency, corporate execution, and a vast domestic consumption base. With India projected to become the world's third-largest economy this decade—surpassing Germany—the macro setup offers a compelling backdrop for this strong structural case, BofA remains cautious on India's equity markets in the short term. It expects GDP growth to come in at 6.3% in FY26, slightly below the Reserve Bank of India's 6.5% forecast, citing only a shallow revival in GDP, capex, and brokerage has retained its year-end Nifty target at 25,000, indicating no further upside after the recent rally. It flagged seven emerging risks that warrant caution on large caps and broader markets, although specifics were not stance is clear: India's long-term equity story is underpinned by deep structural change and remains one of the most attractive globally. But in the near term, stretched valuations and global headwinds demand a more conservative approach.

India crowned top destination for stock compounders, says BofA; lists 9 structural themes
India crowned top destination for stock compounders, says BofA; lists 9 structural themes

Time of India

time42 minutes ago

  • Time of India

India crowned top destination for stock compounders, says BofA; lists 9 structural themes

In a powerful long-term endorsement of India's equity markets, Bank of America ( BofA ) Securities has ranked the country as the world's top hunting ground for stock compounders , driven by a confluence of nine structural growth engines. While bullish on India's decade-long trajectory, the brokerage struck a cautious tone on near-term market prospects, citing elevated valuations and global risks. India is expected to be the fastest-growing large economy in 2025 and 2026, according to the International Monetary Fund. Over the last three decades, the Indian market has delivered USD-based returns of 7% CAGR—second only to the US. More significantly, these returns have been powered by earnings growth rather than valuation expansion, setting India apart globally. Bank of America's strategist, Amish Shah said the confluence of nine structural drivers is likely to position India for sustained economic and corporate earnings growth. He emphasized that India ranks as the top country globally in providing a high number of stock compounders, and that this trend is likely to persist. 'Hence, India ranks as the top country globally to provide high number of stock compounders, a trend we expect to continue. However, we are cautious on markets near term as valuations seem full & markets are ignoring risks of likely slowing global growth,' Shah wrote in a strategy note. Shah highlighted that India's outperformance is built on strong fundamentals, regulatory consistency, corporate execution, and a vast domestic consumption base. With India projected to become the world's third-largest economy this decade—surpassing Germany—the macro setup offers a compelling backdrop for equities. Also read | Smallcap stocks are doubling money like it's 2024 once again. Should you jump in? Nine Structural Themes Fueling India's Growth Outlook BofA outlined nine long-term themes that make it constructive on India's equity outlook: Infrastructure Boom: India is on track to add more infrastructure between FY15 and FY30 than it did in the previous 65 years, with a projected 3.25x economic multiplier according to an RBI study. Productivity Gains: Improvements in logistics, energy efficiency, and capital-output ratios suggest a productivity renaissance akin to the 2003–07 boom years. Digitization: With more than 900 million internet users and ultra-low data costs, India has witnessed a 140x surge in digital transactions in eight years, fueling a fast-growing digital economy and the fourth-largest venture capital ecosystem globally. Financialization: Over 90% of Indians now have bank accounts, up from 35% in 2011, but formal credit penetration remains low at 11–13%, providing significant room for expansion in financial services. Household Savings Strength: Households contribute over 60% to the national savings pool. Improving balance sheets and easing inflation are expected to further support domestic capital formation. Discretionary Consumption Shift: As per capita income nears $5,000 by 2030, the share of discretionary consumption is expected to rise to 43%, up from the current 36%, driven by premiumization and a growing middle class. Formalization Push: Reforms like GST, UPI and e-invoicing are driving growth in the formal sector, broadening the tax base and creating scale benefits for organized players. Improving External Position: PLI schemes, labor reforms, and infrastructure investment could transform India from a current account deficit country into one running surpluses. Decarbonization Momentum: India has already invested $216 billion in clean energy over the last decade, and is expected to deploy another $270 billion by FY30. Market Outlook: Long-Term Conviction, Short-Term Caution Despite this strong structural case, BofA remains cautious on India's equity markets in the short term. It expects GDP growth to come in at 6.3% in FY26, slightly below the Reserve Bank of India's 6.5% forecast, citing only a shallow revival in GDP, capex, and consumption. The brokerage has retained its year-end Nifty target at 25,000, indicating no further upside after the recent rally. It flagged seven emerging risks that warrant caution on large caps and broader markets, although specifics were not detailed. BofA's stance is clear: India's long-term equity story is underpinned by deep structural change and remains one of the most attractive globally. But in the near term, stretched valuations and global headwinds demand a more conservative approach.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store