Interesting updates related to migrant worker issues

19 12, 2012

Construction workers at Yishun site down tools to protest non-payment of wages

2019-08-30T16:35:21+08:00December 19th, 2012|News, News Flash, Uncategorized|

Twenty Indian workers, employees of Sime Chong Construction, refused to report for work on Tuesday 18 December 2012 over two months of salary arrears, reported various media on 18 and 19 December 2012. Four other workers, from China, had earlier lodged complaints at the Ministry of Manpower on 7 November 2012 over the same issue and

19 12, 2012

Only 150,000 dorm beds for over 700,000 workers

2019-08-30T16:35:21+08:00December 19th, 2012|News, News Flash, Uncategorized|

The lead story on the front page of the Straits Times (18 Dec 2012: Dormitory operators unite to raise standards) was about eight dormitory operators founding a new Dormitory Association of Singapore (DASL) in September this year. More interestingly, the story provided some numbers about dormitory beds in Singapore. It said that these eight companies

12 12, 2012

Five SMRT bus drivers charged for protest

2019-08-30T16:35:21+08:00December 12th, 2012|News, News Flash, Uncategorized|

Five ex-SMRT bus drivers have been charged for criminal offences. Bao Fengshan's case was heard on 3 December 2012. He was accused of "commencing the strike", pleaded guilty and was jailed six weeks. (Channel NewsAsia, 3 Dec 2012, 6 weeks' jail for SMRT bus driver involved in strike, by Dylan Loh) Gao Yueqiang, 32; Liu Xiangying,

17 11, 2012

Bangladeshi worker killed by falling rods

2019-08-30T16:35:22+08:00November 17th, 2012|News, News Flash, Uncategorized|

Mominul Islam, 36, died at his worksite on the morning of 16 November 2012. He was killed when steel rods fell on him. The Straits Times reported a co-worker describing the incident at 30, Tuas Bay Drive, as one where a "wire mesh" (probably a criss-cross assembly of rods) weighing between three and five tons

16 11, 2012

Two companies charged for not paying workers their salaries and receiving kickbacks

2019-08-30T16:35:22+08:00November 16th, 2012|News, News Flash, Uncategorized|

Two companies, Techcom Construction & Trading and Sunway Concrete Products, were charged in court for failing to pay their workers on time, reported the Straits Times on Friday, 16 Nov 2012. Sunway is the main contractor for Techcom. Techcom faces a total of 59 charges under the Employment Act for failing to pay its workers

16 11, 2012

Manager fined for obtaining gifts from workers for work permit renewal

2019-08-30T16:35:22+08:00November 16th, 2012|News, News Flash, Uncategorized|

In quite possibly the first case of its kind, a former factory manager was fined $8,000 and ordered to pay a further penalty of $4,030 for corruption. Toh Phoo Chye, 46, had obtained Nokia mobile phones from foreign workers in exchange for recommending to the management to renew their work permits. This case was reported

13 11, 2012

260 employers caught for exceeding overtime limits in last four years

2019-08-30T16:35:22+08:00November 13th, 2012|News, News Flash, Uncategorized|

Acting Manpower Minister Tan Chuan-Jin revealed in parliament 12 November 2012 that 260 employers were found to have contravened the limit of overtime work between 2008 and 2011. Of these, 56 employers were issued compositions fines by the Ministry while another 21 were prosecuted in court for more serious breaches. The remaining were issued warnings

9 11, 2012

Amended EFMA to take effect from 9 Nov 2012

2019-08-30T16:35:22+08:00November 9th, 2012|News, News Flash, Uncategorized|

The recent amendments to the Employment of Foreign Manpower Act (EFMA) will take effect on 9 November 2012, reported the Straits Times and Channel NewsAsia. Both reports highlighted the introduction of administrative penalties. A financial penalty will be imposed on administrative infringements. These are EFMA breaches that do not directly harm workers and are not

5 11, 2012

Supply of blue-collar foreign workers drying up

2019-08-30T16:35:22+08:00November 5th, 2012|Articles, News, News Flash, Uncategorized|

A report in the Business Times, 24 April 2012, highlighted the gradual drying up of Singapore's usual sources of foreign blue-collar workers. The story, headlined "S'pore magnet losing its foreign worker pull" by Cai Haoxiang is archived in Asia One. The traditional source of unskilled labour, Malaysia, dried up years ago. But in recent years

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