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US State Department's Trafficking in Persons Report 2008 on Malaysia (Tier 2 Watch List) | US State Department's Trafficking in Persons Report 2008 on Malaysia (Tier 2 Watch List) |
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| Tuesday, 22 July 2008 11:59am | |
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Malaysia is a destination, and to a lesser extent, a source and transit country for women and children trafficked for the purpose of commercial sexual exploitation and men, women, and children for forced labor. Malaysia is mainly a destination country for men, women, and children who migrate willingly from Indonesia, Nepal, Thailand, the People’s Republic of China (P.R.C.), the Philippines, Burma, Cambodia, Bangladesh, Pakistan, and Vietnam to work, some of whom are subjected to conditions of involuntary servitude by Malaysian employers in the domestic, agricultural, construction, plantation, and industrial sectors. Some migrant workers are victimized by their employers, employment agents, or traffickers that supply migrant laborers and victims of sex trafficking. Victims suffer conditions including physical and sexual abuse, debt bondage, non-payment of wages, threats, confinement, and withholding of travel documents to restrict their freedom of movement. In addition, some female domestics from Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines, Cambodia, Vietnam, Burma, Mongolia, and the P.R.C. are forced into commercial sexual exploitation after being deceived with promises of jobs or after running away from abusive employers. Individual employment agents sold women and girls into brothels, karaoke bars, or passed them to sex traffickers. Some Burmese registered with the United Nations as refugees, a status not recognized by the Malaysian government, are vulnerable to being trafficked for forced labor. To a lesser extent, some Malaysian women, primarily of Chinese ethnicity, are trafficked abroad for commercial sexual exploitation. Also, a few Malaysians, specifically women and girls from indigenous groups and rural areas, are trafficked within the country for labor and commercial sexual exploitation. The Government of Malaysia does not fully comply with the minimum standards for
the elimination of trafficking; however, it is making significant efforts to do
so. Malaysia is placed on Tier 2 Watch List for its failure to provide evidence
of increasing efforts from the previous year to tackle its large and
multidimensional trafficking problem, including its forced labor problem. The
Government of Malaysia enacted comprehensive anti-trafficking legislation in
July 2007. It completed development of implementing guidelines, training of key
law enforcement and social service officers, and issued legislative supplements
to bring the law fully into force in late February 2008. The government,
however, did not yet take action against exploitative employers or labor
traffickers during the reporting period. The government has not yet widely
implemented mechanisms to screen victims of trafficking from vulnerable groups.
The government established an interagency National Council for Anti-Trafficking
in Persons that includes representatives from civil society that has drafted a
national action plan. Also in March 2008, the Ministry for Women, Family, and
Community Development opened two trafficking victims’ shelters and began
assisting foreign victims of sex trafficking. The Government of Malaysia demonstrated improvements in
efforts to investigate and prosecute trafficking cases during the reporting
period. Malaysian law prohibits all forms of human trafficking through its July
2007 comprehensive anti-trafficking law, which prescribes penalties that are
commensurate with those prescribed for other grave offenses, such as rape. The
government did not provide comprehensive prosecution and conviction statistics,
and, prior to bringing the new anti-trafficking law into force, continued to
rely on its Emergency Ordinance and Restricted Residence Acts for law
enforcement actions against suspected sex traffickers. These laws have been
criticized for lack of transparency and due process. In November 2007, a
Malaysian court convicted a 32-year-old HIV positive Malaysian citizen for
procuring a 14-year-old girl for sex; he was sentenced to 43 years in jail, 20
strokes of the cane, and a fine of $15,625.00. In January 2008, police arrested
a couple in Sabah for trafficking seven Filipina women for commercial sexual
exploitation; the couple recruited the women with promises of jobs as
waitresses. In March 2008, the police conducted a raid in Johor Bahru that
resulted in the rescue of 17 Thai women trafficked into commercial sexual
exploitation. A second raid by police rescued four Chinese and two Vietnamese
women, also trafficked into commercial sexual exploitation. Also in March 2008,
Malaysian immigration authorities carried out a raid in Seremban that resulted
in the detention of three suspected traffickers and the rescue of seven Thai and
three Lao women trafficked into commercial sexual exploitation. During the
reporting period, the Royal Malaysian Police (RMP) detained 55 suspected
traffickers for commercial sexual exploitation under the Emergency Ordinance and
Restricted Residence Act. The government did not report prosecutions against
suspected traffickers arrested and jailed under these preventive laws. Despite
indications of a sizable number of migrant laborers trafficked to Malaysia and
widespread media reporting of the trafficking conditions many of these workers
face, the government did not report any criminal investigations or prosecutions
of Malaysian employers who subjected foreign workers to conditions of forced
labor or Malaysian labor recruiters who used deceptive practices and debt
bondage to compel migrant workers into involuntary servitude. During the
reporting period, there were several NGO and media reports regarding groups of
foreign workers subjected to conditions of forced labor in Malaysia. In March
2008, Bangladeshi workers at a chain of U.K.-owned supermarkets in Malaysia
reportedly faced deceptive recruitment, debt bondage, and exploitative wage
deductions consistent with forced labor. In November 2007, reports surfaced
regarding 1,300 Vietnamese laborers subjected to debt bondage, contract
switching, confiscation of travel documents, confinement, and threats of
deportation at a Hong Kong-owned apparel factory in Penang. Despite ample
reporting on these incidents, Malaysian authorities did not respond with
criminal investigations or prosecutions regarding the alleged offenses. In the
Penang case, the complainants pursued the matter as a labor dispute, rather than
ask the police to make a criminal investigation. A 2006 Memorandum of
Understanding (MOU) between the Governments of Malaysia and Indonesia covering
the employment of Indonesian women as domestic servants in Malaysia authorizes
Malaysian employers to confiscate and hold the passport of the domestic employee
throughout the term of employment. This practice is recognized by many in the
international anti-trafficking community as facilitating the involuntary
servitude of domestic workers. Malaysia, particularly in accordance with the
aforementioned MOU with Indonesia, did not prosecute employers who confiscated
migrant workers’ passports or who confined workers to the workplace. Passport
confiscation, otherwise a violation of the Passports Act, is a common method of
controlling contract laborers. It also remained common practice for the wages of
employees to be held in “escrow” until completion of a contract. There were no
substantiated reports of direct government involvement in the trafficking of
persons at either the local or institutional level; however, there were reports
of low-level complicity of immigration authorities at the land borders with
Thailand and Indonesia. No government officials were implicated, arrested, or
tried for involvement in trafficking. Malaysia’s overall efforts to protect victims of trafficking
remained inadequate during the reporting period. Basic protections for victims
were widely unavailable to most foreign females trafficked for sexual
exploitation to Malaysia during the year. The Malaysian government stated it
encouraged victims to assist in the investigation and prosecution of
traffickers; in practice few victims were willing to testify. A trafficking
victim may file a civil suit against a trafficker under Malaysian law, but in
practice this seldom happens. Potential victims continued to be charged for
prostitution and immigration violations during the reporting period. The
government provided no legal alternatives to the removal of foreign victims to
countries where they face hardship or retribution. There was no widespread
effort by the Government of Malaysia to identify trafficking victims among
vulnerable migrant groups, such as girls and women detained for involvement in
prostitution or the thousands of undocumented migrant workers rounded up by RELA,
a government-sponsored public security auxiliary force. Victims detained by
immigration authorities, including children, were routinely processed as illegal
migrants and held in prisons or illegal migrant detention facilities prior to
deportation. In March 2008, the Ministry for Women, Family and Community
Development opened two shelters and provided assistance to 33 victims of sex
trafficking rescued during its first month in operation. The victims were
processed through a magistrate’s court within 24 hours or less to legally
identify them as trafficking victims before their placement in the shelter.
Prior to the opening of the government shelters, the RMP instituted an informal
victim referral process that referred over 200 suspected trafficking victims to
NGO and embassy operated shelters. Immigration authorities did not screen
foreign women arrested for prostitution for identification as trafficking
victims, but instead processed them for quick deportation. In some cases,
especially those involving deportation over land borders such as along the
Malaysian-Indonesian border on Borneo, trafficking victims were vulnerable to
being re-trafficked by traffickers operating at formal border crossing points. Senior Malaysian officials, including the Prime Minister, Foreign Affairs Minister, and Minister for Women, Families, and Social Development, increasingly spoke out against trafficking in persons, but the Government of Malaysia did not sponsor anti-trafficking information campaigns during the reporting period. In January 2008, the Director General for Enforcement in the Department of Immigration issued a public warning that employers could be charged under the new anti-trafficking law for cases involving abuse and exploitation of foreign workers. There were no visible measures taken by the government to reduce demand for commercial sex acts or raise awareness about child sex tourism. Protection officers from the Women’s Ministry received specialized training on assisting victims. The RMP initiated training of trafficking victim identification during the year. All troops assigned to peacekeeping missions received training on trafficking in persons at Malaysia’s Peacekeeping Training Center at Port Dickson. There were no allegations that Malaysian peacekeepers were involved in trafficking or in exploiting trafficking victims. The government has not ratified the 2000 UN TIP Protocol. Set as favourite Share Email This Trackback(0)
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