Type of issue: criminal charges, prosecution

31 07, 2016

MOM’s groundless case takes two years out of Shahidulla’s life, part 2

2019-08-30T16:32:01+08:00July 31st, 2016|Articles, Stories|

By Seema Punwani Continued from part 1. When truth wins, you hear drum rolls. You do mental cartwheels. Your faith in justice is restored. And you heave a sigh of relief that after all the obstacles and the insurmountable tension, you emerged victorious. Because truth prevailed. As Part 1 explained, Shahidulla Md Anser Ali was

31 07, 2016

MOM’s groundless case takes two years out of Shahidulla’s life, part 3

2019-08-30T16:32:01+08:00July 31st, 2016|Articles, Stories|

Continued from part 2. Soon after his acquittal on the first of three charges, Shahidulla got another shock. His key witness, crane operator Hassan, was called up by the case officer at the Ministry of Manpower (MOM) for an interview, and the next thing Shahidulla's lawyer heard was that Hassan had become a prosecution witness

16 03, 2016

Crime among foreign workers is lower than in general population, Home Affairs minister tells parliament

2019-08-30T16:32:03+08:00March 16th, 2016|News, News Flash|

Minister for Home Affairs K Shanmugam told Parliament on March 2016 that foreign workers commit fewer crimes per capita than the resident Singapore population. Crime incidents within the foreign worker population are lower than that among the general Singapore population, Minister for Home Affairs K. Shanmugam told Parliament on Monday (14 March). “They are here

24 11, 2015

A Sri Lankan’s story – the blurry line between exploitation and trafficking

2019-08-30T16:32:22+08:00November 24th, 2015|Articles, Facts, research, analysis, Stories|

Transient Workers Count Too sees a relatively small number of Sri Lankans in the course of our work. There are far fewer of them in Singapore compared to Indians and Bangladeshis. Sri Lankans are an approved source for domestic work, construction and marine sectors, but except for women in the former, TWC2 can't recall seeing

6 11, 2015

The bicycle thief (who didn’t do it)

2019-08-30T16:32:23+08:00November 6th, 2015|Articles, Stories|

In the much acclaimed 1948 Italian movie of the same name, the protagonist searches for his stolen bike, the bike that he needs to keep his job to help his family escape from poverty in post-World War 2 Italy. Arman, the protagonist of this story who came to work in Singapore to help lift his

13 06, 2015

Employer fails to pay, worker goes to jail

2019-08-30T16:32:30+08:00June 13th, 2015|Articles, Stories|

By Alexandra Galvez “I don’t want to go to jail. I cannot come back to Singapore to work if I go to jail. I like Singapore and I want to continue working here. I need to provide for my family,” Ali (not his real name) is worried, his countenance darkening with anxiety and desperation. The

16 05, 2015

Bangladeshi construction worker fined $40,000; acted as unlicensed employment agent

2019-08-30T16:32:31+08:00May 16th, 2015|News, News Flash|

For a payment of $3,000, Ahmead Rubel, 28, found a job for fellow Bangladeshi, Jabed, to work as a construction worker in Nanjing Minglu Construction Engineering Co. Ltd. For conducting employment agency activities without a valid employment agency licence, Rubel -- himself a construction worker -- was fined $40,000 in default four months' imprisonment, reported

7 01, 2015

Careful spitting merits fine

2019-08-30T16:32:54+08:00January 7th, 2015|Articles, Stories|

"You did Spit onto a Public Place (Drain)" -- this was the awkward and legalistic way Imran’s Notice to Attend Court described his offence. How was he to know that spitting in a drain by the side of the road was wrong? “No person shall spit any substance or expel mucus from the nose upon

25 09, 2014

Singaporean ship manning agent accused in Filipino court of trafficking in persons

2019-08-30T16:33:01+08:00September 25th, 2014|News, News Flash|

A former director of a ship manning agency has been charged in a Filipino court with human trafficking and illegal recruitment, the Sunday Times reported on 21 September 2014. However, he appears to be still in Singapore, and there is no extradition treaty between Singapore and the Philippines. Victor Lim, formerly of Step Up Marine

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