ID :
215405
Thu, 11/17/2011 - 05:12
Auther :
Shortlink :
https://www.oananews.org//node/215405
The shortlink copeid
Indonesia Officially Allows Domestic Maids For Malaysia Beginning Dec 1

Ahmad Fuad Yahya
NUSA DUA, Nov 17 (Bernama) -- Indonesia Wednesday announced officially that
it will resume the sending of domestic maids to Malaysia effective Dec 1.
The decision on the matter was made jointly by Malaysian Prime Minister
Najib Tun Razak and President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono at a bilateral
meeting, here Wednesday night.
"At the meeting just now, President SBY and I had decided together that the
sending of manpower (in non-formal sectors) from Indonesia to Malaysia will be
resumed beginning Dec 1.
"This news will certainly be well received in Malaysia because the people
concerned have been waiting for a long time and this shows the determination and
sincerity of President SBY in looking for a positive settlement to whatever
problems that crop up between the two countries," Najib told Malaysian
journalists at a press conference, here Wednesday night.
He said he had expressed the Malaysian government's and people's
appreciation for the decision with the hope that its implementation would run
smoothly in line with the amendments made to the memorandum on the recruitment
and deployment of Indonesian work force which was signed by both countries in
Bandung in May.
The bilateral meeting was a follow-up to the meeting between the two
leaders at the Annual Consultation held in Lombok, Nusa Tenggara Barat, last
month where both parties had agreed to make a joint decision in Bali on the
issue.
At the meeting in Lombok, they had agreed to look at the report of the Joint
Special Task Force on the implementation mechanism for the protocols to amend
the Memorandum of Understanding on the Recruitment and Deployment of Indonesian
Domestic Maids 2006.
On Wednesday, both the Malaysian Human Resource Minister Dr S. Subramaniam
and Indonesian Manpower and Transmigration Minister Muhaimin Iskandar had
reported to both leaders on the implementation mechanism for the agreement.
Indonesia enforced the temporary freeze on the despatch of domestic maids to
Malaysia on June 26, 2009 following several incidents of abuse by Malaysian
employers on their Indonesian maids.
Subsequently, both countries had discussed the matter until a consensus was
reached with the signing of a protocol to amend several provisions in the 2006
memorandum of understanding, held in Bandung on May 30.
However, the adoption of a suitable mechanism for the implementation of the
protocol pertaining to the protection of the Indonesian domestic maids and their
employers by the Joint Special Task Force had resulted in the withdrawal of the
moratorium being delayed until now.
Dr Subramanian, when clarifying on the agreement, said among the major
issues that were agreed upon were the necessity to have a working contract for
domestic maid, the cost of recruiting Indonesian maid fixed at RM4,511
(US$1=RM3.14), compulsory 200-hour course, one day per week holiday, besides
allowing the maids to keep their own passport.
Employers, on the other hand, are allowed to take back RM1,800 from their
cost in advancing to the workers by deducting their pay not exceeding 50 per
cent per month from their salary.
-- BERNAMA