Monday, November 2, 2009

More than 30,000 workers retrenched after economic downturn began

KUALA LUMPUR: More than 30,000 workers were retrenched after the economic downturn began at the end of 2008.
Deputy Home Minister Jelaing Mersat told Parliament on Tuesday that the Labour Department had recorded 34,173 workers retrenched up to this month, including 8,805 foreign workers.
However, there was no record on the breakdown of where the foreign workers were from.
The Government had then frozen foreign workers intake in electrical/electronics subsectors, textile and all services subsectors except for cooks in restaurant, resort workers, cleaners, from Jan 28, he said.
He said in reply to questions from Tengku Razaleigh Hamsah (BN Gua Musang) and Fong Kui Lun (DAP Bukit Bintang).
Razaleigh had asked for the number of Indonesian, Bangladeshi, Filipina and Thai workers that had been retrenched during the economic crisis while Fong asked the Ministry about the sectors for foreign workers that were frozen and then reopened and the number whose permits had expired and sent back to their home countries.
Jelaing said that from the 549,242 foreign workers, as of the first quarter of this year, 214,425 had left for their home countries by midyear.
He also said that, as of July 27, the electrical/electronics and textile subsectors in the manufacturing sector had been opened again for foreign workers following improvement in the economy and demand for the products in the subsectors.
A technical committee had been set up to determine the qualifications, conditions and the need for foreign workers for each industry and companies that apply for foreign workers, he said.

-the star-

Sunday, November 1, 2009

No harm in adding Tamil to DVD, says Devamany

THERE is nothing wrong in adding the Tamil language in the Malaysia Truly Asia promotional DVD, said Deputy Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk S.K. Devamany.
“No harm adding one more language,” he said, adding that 85% of Indians in Malaysia are of Tamil origin.
“They can also take the DVD out of Malaysia to promote tourism,” he told reporters at the Parliament lobby yesterday.
Devamany, who is MIC vice-president, said he would ask Tourism Minister Datuk Seri Dr Ng Yen Yen to include the Tamil language in the DVD.
On Monday, Fong Kui Lun (DAP – Bukit Bintang) asked Dr Ng why Tamil was not used in a DVD to promote Malaysia as other languages – Russian, Japanese, Korean, Mandarin and English were used, to which Dr Ng replied that most Indians in the middle income group speak English, unlike tourists from China.

-the star-