Malaysia palm oil workers discouraged from going home, rights groups say

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Reuters:Some Malaysian palm oil plantations are discouraging foreign workers from going home at the end of their contracts and are asking them to keep working as the novel coronavirus exacerbates a chronic labour shortage, rights groups say.
Malaysia’s two biggest palm planters said they were not forcing workers to stay but efforts to repatriate migrants had been slowed by novel coronavirus travel restrictions.
Malaysian plantations have long faced accusations of mistreating the 330,000 or so migrants who make up 84% of the workforce producing palm oil, which is used in everything from food to soap. The crop has also drawn criticism from environmentalists over the clearing of forests to plant it.
Hong Kong-based anti-trafficking group Liberty Shared told Reuters it had interviewed dozens of plantation workers in Malaysia and many had said they wanted to leave but had been told they could not because of coronavirus restrictions.
Labour rights group Verite and the Malaysia-based non-governmental group (NGO) Tenaganita said they had received similar complaints. All three groups said they believed the issue was common and that thousands of workers could be affected.
“We’re seeing workers discouraged from leaving, being asked to keep working, paid in cash or not paid at all, paid late, promised a ticket home and then that promise isn’t satisfied,” said Duncan Jepson, managing director of Liberty Shared.
A senior official in the Labour Department of the Ministry of Human Resources, which is responsible for foreign workers, said it had not received any such complaint but viewed allegations seriously and urged NGOs to report them.
Most foreign workers are from India, Bangladesh and Indonesia and are paid by the amount of palm fruit they harvest, sometimes complaining they do not make the 1,100 ringgit ($270) minimum monthly wage.
At the end of contracts – usually for three years – they can go home but there were complaints even before the coronavirus that companies discouraged them from leaving because it costs more to replace them.
The pandemic has exacerbated the labour crunch with companies unable to fly new workers in because of travel restrictions.
Liberty Shared said it sent a complaint to Malaysia’s anti-trafficking agency on Dec. 8, asking for help in the cases of five specific workers who had been trying to go home for months.
The agency did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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