Saturday, February 27, 2010

Refugees may be allowed to work here

Sunday February 21, 2010
Refugees may be allowed to work here
By MAZWIN NIK ANIS
http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2010/2/21/nation/20100221173332&sec=nation

PUTRAJAYA: The government is considering allowing the 80,000-odd refugees in the country to work.
The Home Ministry and Wisma Putra are expected to sit together to look at the issue following calls from many sectors asking the government to allow the group to be work here while waiting to be resettled in third countries.
Home Minister Datuk Seri Hishammuddin Tun Hussein said the matter was being considered due to the fact that the refugees’ stay in Malaysia was only temporary.
“The suggestion might work but we need to look at it from all angles. The implications need to be made known before we decide on it.
“My ministry cannot decide on this alone. We will engage the Foreign Ministry and probably even foreign missions and other relevant authorities to get as many points of view as possible,” he said Sunday.
Foreign Minister Datuk Seri Anifah Aman said the government needed to weigh all the pros and cons before committing to the new policy.
“We have to study this in detail. It will benefit the country if refugees with certain expertise are allowed to work while they are here,” he said.
Several parties, including the Malaysian Trades Union Congress (MTUC) have called on the government to allow refugees to work, particularly in labour-strapped sectors, instead of importing more foreign workers.
This would help to overcome the worker shortage and, at the same time, gain Malaysia international recognition as a humane country.
Refugees who are waiting to be resettled to a third country are not allowed to work but can take on odd-jobs.
The government announced recently that it planned to issue identification cards to refugees who were recognised by the United Nations so that they would not be arrested as illegal immigrants.

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

M'sia plans IDs for refugees

The Singapore Straits Times
Feb 1, 2010
M'sia plans IDs for refugees

KUALA LUMPUR - MALAYSIA plans to issue identification cards to refugees who are recognised by the United Nations, allowing them to stay in the country temporarily and avoid arrest as illegal immigrants.

Malaysia, which has declined to join the UN convention on refugees for fear of attracting a flood of migrants, previously has arrested refugees frequently as illegal aliens. Mostly from Myanmar, the refugees often have spent months in overcrowded detention centres and faced caning and deportation.

The plans announced on Monday reflect a softening of Malaysia's position toward the refugees, although it continues to refuse them official recognition.

Home Ministry Secretary General Mahmood Adam said the government would work with the UN refugee agency to issue the cards so immigration enforcement personnel would recognise and spare UN-designated refugees.

'As long as they are recognised as refugees by the UN, they can stay here temporarily,' he told The Associated Press. 'They cannot work here, but they can do odd jobs.' He could not give an exact timeline but said the initiative was in the 'final stage'. According to the UN agency, about 75,600 refugees and asylum-seekers were in Malaysia as of November. Most fled persecution in Myanmar.
Ms Yante Ismail, a spokesman for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, welcomed the development and further discussions to form a documentation system. -- AP