I’m sure most readers of UV are already familiar with the events of the last few days involving expatriate Bangladeshi workers. A small recap:

15th September AFP:

Malaysian immigration authorities have established a makeshift camp in the car park of Kuala Lumpur’s airport for foreign workers waiting to be collected by their agents, a report said Sunday.

Immigration Department chief Wahid Don said that corralling the workers in the car park prevented them loitering in the main airport buildings and creating an “unpleasant” situation for other travellers.

“We can’t have them running around the airport and congesting the premises,” he told the Sunday Star newspaper.”

(Frankly I personally don’t like the “chief’s” tone, but am willing to give him the benefit of the doubt. Perhaps his sympathy isn’t best conveyed in print.)

On 16th September, the Daily Star reports on a different incident:

The Bangladeshi workers who had been on a hunger strike on the premises of Bangladesh High Commission in Kuala Lumpur since Tuesday alleged that men of recruiting agencies attacked and assaulted them on Friday night.

The agency goons however fled when the demonstrating workers counterattacked at 9:00pm local time, a human rights activist in Malaysia told The Daily Star yesterday.

The workers said at least 25 of them were beaten on the high commission premises.

Following the incident, the Malaysian police shifted the demonstrators numbering 100 to a safe shelter on Friday midnight.

Labour Counsellor at the Bangladesh High Commission Talat Mahmud however told private television channel ATN Bangla over the phone that no incident of attack had taken place.

17th September, the Daily Star reports:

Meanwhile, Malaysian police picked up the 82 agitating Bangladeshi workers during demonstrations on the Bangladesh high commission premises in Kuala Lumpur on Friday night and handed them over to Tenaganita, a local human rights organisation….

…a Tenaganita official in Kuala Lumpur told The Daily Star over the phone that the 82 workers are now staying at a place in Rwang, Kuala Lumpur.

“The police picked up the workers in two buses to [send them to] a far off place, but they did not agree to get off. We [Tenaganita] then negotiated with the police and kept them in a shelter,” he said.

Tenaganita is currently providing shelter to about 300 jobless workers who left the jobs as they were either underpaid or forced to work longer hours by their employers, the official added.

Even worse, the article put the number of stranded Bangladeshis at the airport (the first AFP report) at 4000-5000! I’m hoping that this is a typo.

On the bright side, the same article also reported:

Bangladesh yesterday lodged a formal complaint with the Malaysian authorities seeking stern action against Malaysian company PTC Asia Pacific for failing to provide appropriate jobs and facilities to Bangladeshi recruits…..

Iftekhar Ahmed Chowdhury, adviser for foreign affairs, expatriates’ welfare and overseas employment ministries, at an emergency meeting at the ministry decided yesterday to send a team led by expatriates’ welfare secretary Abdul Matin Chowdhury to Malaysia to probe the incidents regarding expatriate workers.

“Actions are also being contemplated against Bangladeshi agencies if found to be at fault,” Iftekhar told journalists following the meeting.

“We give utmost importance to any matter that involves the welfare of Bangladeshi workers. We have a great responsibility towards them. At the same time, Malaysia is an important market for our expatriate workforce. So the matter is delicate. We are looking forward to the cooperation of Malaysian authorities and all concerned,” he said.

The Ministry of Expatriates’ Welfare and Overseas Employment is giving the highest priority to the recent problems of Bangladeshi workers in Malaysia — particularly to the workers who had been on hunger strike on the high commission premises, Iftekhar added

While we wait for this “drama” to unfold and hope and pray that these workers get justice, let us take a moment to applaud the government for acting on this with such speed. As a rule (with many exceptions I’m sure!) it is these workers who send back a greater chunk of their incomes home than more privileged NRBs like yours truly, and boost our balance of payments situation. It’s good to see that the government taking their grievances seriously and responding to them so quickly. It’s the least the workers deserve.

What suggestions do UV readers have to help us avoid such incidents in the future?

More details here.