Ending
exploitation of migrant labor
Yoshiteru Uramoto ; Assistant director general and regional director for Asia
and the Pacific, International Labor Organization
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JAKARTA
POST, 06 Januari 2015
On a recent
trip to Cambodia I met a group of young people who were eager to pursue a
better life by going to work abroad, although they were concerned that many
migrant workers faced unfair treatment. I told them that the International
Labor Organization (ILO) was working on making labor migration safer and more
profitable. “That’s good,” one of them said. “We don’t want Naga World [the
local casino] when we go abroad, we just want fair treatment.”
Fair
treatment, without having to gamble with their future or even their physical
safety, is what all migrant workers want. It is also the essence of the ILO’s
fair migration agenda. We want to see labor migration create a “triple win”
for workers, employers and governments, especially as this region moves
towards the introduction of the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) at the end of
2015.
However, the
current gaps in legislative protection and the implementation of measures to
regulate labor migration mean that all migrant workers have to gamble. And
that gamble begins before they even leave home.
Potential
migrant workers often borrow money or put up security (like deeds to land or
a house) to pay recruitment or brokerage costs, so they are in debt even
before they leave their home country. They gamble that they will be migrating
safely to a good job.
When arriving
in the host country, migrant workers, even those with correct documentation,
often find themselves the victims of extortion at border checkpoints. They
may have to pay a bribe, which means the amount of money they are gambling on
their migration has increased, making them less likely to complain, or cut
their stay short, if the job, conditions or pay they are offered is not what
they were promised.
Such
exploitation is not unusual; for many migrant workers in the ASEAN region, it
is a very real risk. An ILO study found that one in six workers in the Thai
fishing sector worked in conditions of forced labor. A recent report by the
NGO Verité found even stronger indications of forced labor in Malaysia’s
electronics industry.
So the
migrant workers once again gamble that their host country will take care of
them, by providing labor inspections, insurance and social security, access
to justice and recourse if they are underpaid, exploited or injured at work.
But current systems often favor recruiters and employers. And xenophobia,
fear, myths and untruths dominate the public debate, meaning that those who
should help migrant workers — police, government services — are not always
willing to assist.
Migrant
workers have to take a bet on their future at every stage. But finding decent
work, no matter who you are, shouldn’t be a gamble. The ILO has been trying
to change the situation of migrant workers by working with governments and
workers’ and employers’ organizations in countries of both origin and reception.
But we don’t
have to leave it to them. Everybody can make a difference for migrant
workers. We can start by changing our attitudes and conversations. We should
concentrate on what migrants contribute, not on negative myths and hearsay.
Migrant work provides a massive economic boost to this region, and
remittances to the East Asia and Pacific region are worth more than US$90
billion.
So, in the
wake of Migrants’ Day held every Dec. 18, let’s look beyond the stereotypes
that characterize migrant workers as disposable, impersonal resources, rather
than hard-working individuals who want to earn a better life. Try and put
yourself in the shoes of a migrant worker and speak out against unfairness,
exploitation and abuse, whenever and wherever you see it, be it in homes,
factories, boats, fields or the public street.
By working
together with employers, governments and migrant workers, we can even the
odds and make migrant work a fair deal — not a gamble — for all. ●
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