Jakarta Globe, Nov 08, 2014
Jakarta. The newly inaugurated Minister of Manpower and Transmigration, Hanif Dhakiri, pledged on Saturday to audit all migrant worker placement agencies in a bid to crack down on widespread extortion of some of the country’s most vulnerable people.
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| Indonesian migrant workers wait to exit a Saudi ship at Tanjung Priok Port, in Jakarta. (JG Photo/Udhi Sukma Wijaya) |
Jakarta. The newly inaugurated Minister of Manpower and Transmigration, Hanif Dhakiri, pledged on Saturday to audit all migrant worker placement agencies in a bid to crack down on widespread extortion of some of the country’s most vulnerable people.
“I will not
tolerate anyone playing dirty, be it the agencies or the staff in my ministry,”
Hanif told Indonesian news portal Tempo.co on Saturday.
The sector
is nominally regulated but criminal gangs have long established that the placing of poorer members of society
in countries such Dubai and Saudi Arabia makes for good business. Migrant
workers frequently fall victim to extortion at the hands of these agents.
“Hopeful
migrant workers are asked to deposit guarantee money and told they would
receive training but what happens next is they don’t get the training and the
agents run away with their money,” Hanif told Tempo.
The lot of
the migrant worker is a major political issue in Indonesia. While remittances
sent by construction workers and domestic workers from abroad has had an
important impact on raising hundreds of thousands of families out of poverty,
migrant workers are often victim to mental and physical abuse and in many cases
have to surrender their passports to either agents or employers.
Extreme
cases such as the recent murders of two women in Hong Kong, allegedly at the
hands of a British banker, occasionally make international headlines, but the
domestic press is never short on stories of abuse perpetrated by agents,
employers — even the governments of workers’ destination countries.
There are
around 45 Indonesian domestic workers on death row in Saudi Arabia, while 375
Indonesians workers were facing the death penalty worldwide in 2012, according
to data from Migrant Care, a Jakarta-based advocacy group set up by labor
activists.
While
migrant workers are frequently extorted when they are first recruited — the
villages of West Java being particularly fertile ground for placement agents —
the return journey home has historically been an opportunity for members of the
military, police and airport authorities to take a cut of workers’ wages.
The KPK and
the National Police conducted a joint raid on July 25 at Soekarno Hatta
International Airport in Jakarta and arrested 18 people — including a soldier
and two members of the National Police.
The men
were running a decade-long racket at the airport where returning workers would
be forced to pay up to 10 times the market rate for a taxi to their chosen
destination. A foreign exchange scam would also relieve the workers of large
sums of money. One worker testified that she had been forced to pay $250 for a
taxi.
The vast
scale of the extortion racket is instructive of a systemic lack of protection.
Migrant
Care director Anis Hidayah said earlier this year that 400-500 migrant workers
were extorted when they returned home, describing the scam as “systemic” and
estimating that the figure represented 45 percent of the total number of
workers re-entering Indonesia.
In addition
to addressing the entrenched exploitation of workers, Hanif also plans to
improve the facilities where migrant workers are housed before they leave the
country.
“The fact
is; they look more like detention centers,” Hanif told Tempo.co.
“I have
seen some migrant workers stay in these shelters for eight months,” he added.
Hanif
pledged to ensure that all Indonesian migrant workers receive proper protection
from when they are recruited to when they return home.
Ministry
data show there are 520 registered placement agencies in the country.
“We will
conduct an audit for all these agencies,” Hanif said.

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