*  Besides issuing this media statement, we have also brought this matter  to the attention of SUHAKAM (Malaysia's Human Rights Commission), Prime  Minister of Malaysia and Minister of Human Resources. We will keep you  all updated, if and when, we get a response. 
**On  the date of issuing this statement, a copy was also sent to Dato' Seri  Stanley Thai, Executive Chairman cum Group Managing Director of Supermax  Corporation Berhad, and thereafter, we have also again sent letters  together with this statement, now endorsed by 69 organisations. 
***We hope that Dato' Seri Stanley Thai, Supermax Corporation Berhad and/or Maxter Glove will respond by immediately re-instating Thu Maung, and ensuring his and other workers' rights are fully acknowledged and respected. There will be a prolonged campaign until Thu Maung and other workers get justice.
***We hope that Dato' Seri Stanley Thai, Supermax Corporation Berhad and/or Maxter Glove will respond by immediately re-instating Thu Maung, and ensuring his and other workers' rights are fully acknowledged and respected. There will be a prolonged campaign until Thu Maung and other workers get justice.
Media Statement – 11/6/2010(Updated)
STOP PENALIZING WORKERS  WHO WANT TO GET JUSTICE
- MAXTER GLOVE SHOULD  REINSTATE BURMESE MIGRANT 
WORKER WHO COMPLAINED TO  LABOUR DEPARTMENT
We, the undersigned 69  organizations, groups and networks, concerned about migrant and worker  rights, are appalled at the treatment of workers at Maxter Glove  Manufacturing Sdn Bhd (229862-H), at its factory at  Lot 6070, Jalan Haji  Abdul Manan, 6th Miles off Jalan Meru, Klang, Selangor , Malaysia 
We are appalled at the  dismissal of Thu Maung, a Burmese migrant worker, who courageously  lodged a complaint at the Labour Department to claim his rights as a  worker. Claiming worker rights by lodging complaints against errant  employers at the Labour Department is the proper and legally recognized  procedure in Malaysia 
Maxter Glove  Manufacturing Sdn Bhd is a subsidiary of Supermax Corporation Berhad.  Maxter Glove Manufacturing Sdn Bhd is a gloves manufacturer that  makes Latex Powdered Examination gloves, Clorinated & Polymer Coated  Latex Powder Free gloves, Nitrile Gloves and Sterile surgical gloves  which is also exported overseas. Supermax Corporation Berhad is an established  company, that according to their 2009 Annual Report made an after-tax  profit of about RM126 million.
On 23rd March  2010, Thu Maung and another Burmese migrant worker from Maxter Glove  Manufacturing Sdn Bhd lodged a complaint at the Subang Jaya Labour Department.   Their complaints, amongst others, was that the employer:- 
a.         had wrongfully deducted levy, that  employers have to pay when they employ migrant workers, from the  worker’s wages, 
b.         had  unlawfully deducted the medical check-up fees of RM1000 from the  worker’s wages, 
c.         had  wrongfully withheld 2 months wages, 
d.         had failed to provide the migrant worker with  accommodation, 
e.         had not been  giving the workers one rest day per week, 
f.          had made the workers work overtime(sometimes up to 13  hours per day), and  also on public holidays and rest days, and had  thereafter failed to  pay overtime wages and wages for working on rest  days and/or public holidays at the statutorily stipulated rates. 
On 23rd March,  Thu Maung and another had also lodged a complaint at the Malaysian  Human Rights Commission (SUHAKAM).
On 12 April 2010, Thu  Maung went again to the Labour Department in Rawang and gave a detailed  complaint, whereby the Rawang Labour Department did record the complaint  and forward the same to the Labour Department office in Port Klang,  because they said that the Port Klang Labour Office, has the requisite  jurisdiction since the employer, Maxter Glove Manufacturing Sdn Bhd, is in Klang.
According to Thu Maung,  after about 1 month since the lodging of the complaint at the Subang  Jaya Labour office, company’s representatives started intimidating  workers individually by asking them who had complained to the Labour  Department, and whether they were also going to complain to the Labour  Department. This form of intimidation of workers is deplorable. This  kind of actions by employers has the tendency of instilling fear and  preventing workers from claiming their legally recognized labour rights.
On 28 April 2010, Thu  Maung’s supervisor at the company, for no reason, suddenly asked him to  return the worker’s pass and not to come back to work. Thu Maung was  wrongfully terminated, and he verily believes that this was done just  because he had complained to the Labour Department, and was perceived as  the leader of the workers who wanted to claim their rights.
It is even worse when the  worker is a migrant worker, for a termination will usually mean a  cancellation of the work visa, and deportation back to their home  country. This also would mean that they would not be able to even pursue  their claims at the Labour Department, Labour Courts, Industrial  Relations Department, Industrial Courts and/or Civil Courts as the  physical presence of the complainant and/or litigant is necessary for  the continuation of process of claiming rights. 
The practice of  terminating, cancellation of work visa and immediate deportation is a  blatant disregard of the laws in Malaysia 
Work passes in Malaysia  allow workers to work only for a  specific employer – and hence a termination would leave the worker with  no ability to work and earn a living legally in Malaysia Malaysia 
It is sad that the  current laws and practices of Malaysia 
Whilst there is a clear  provision in the Industrial Relations Act 1967, that is section 5, which  explicitly prohibits employers (or persons acting on behalf of  employers) from discriminating, threatening, dismissing or acting  negatively against workers who are interested in forming, joining,  and/or encouraging other workers to join trade unions, there is no  similar clear provision in law protecting workers who want to claim  their worker rights through the Labour Departments and other available  avenues. As an example, section 5(1)(c) and (d) of the Industrial  Relations Act 1967is as follows:-
(1) No employer or trade  union of employers, and no person action on behalf of an employer or  such trade union shall -
…. (c) discriminate  against any person in regard to employment, promotion, any condition of  employment or working conditions on the ground that he is or is not a  member or officer of a trade union;
(d) dismiss or threaten  to dismiss a workman, injure or threaten to injure him in his employment  or alter or threaten to alter his position to his prejudice by reason  that the workman -
(i) is or proposes to become, or seeks to persuade any  other person to become, a member or officer of a trade union; or
(ii) participates in the  promotion, formation or activities of a trade union; or…
There should be a similar  clear provision in law that will prevent employers from harassing,  threatening, discriminating and/or dismissing workers that claim their  worker rights using existing avenues of complaints and remedies. The act  of employers impeding, dismissing (or threathening to dismiss) workers  who claim their worker rights should also be made an offence with a  hefty fine. Workers should also receive a significant sum in exemplary  damages, over and above their claim. Deterrence is needed to stop this  unhealthy practice of employers violating worker rights, and preventing  them access to justice.
In the case of Thu Maung,  we call for the immediate reinstatement of Thu Maung without any loss  of benefits. 
We call on Dato' Seri Stanley  Thai, Executive Chairman cum Group Managing Director of Supermax Corporation  Berhad, to ensure that the wrong done by their subsidiary, Maxter Glove  Manufacturing Sdn Bhd, to Thu Maung and other workers in the said  company is ended, and that all workers are paid forthwith what has been  wrongly deducted from their wages, monies that have wrongly been  withheld returned, outstanding overtime payments, and that all  legitimate claims are settled. 
We call on the government  of Malaysia to do the needful, including enacting laws that will deter  employers in Malaysia from exploiting workers, and also protect workers  that claim their worker rights from the negative acts of repercussion  and/or ‘revenge’ by some bad employers.
We also call on the  government of Malaysia   to ensure that all migrant workers can continue to stay and work  legally in Malaysia 
Charles Hector
Pranom Somwong 
For and on behalf of the  following 69 organizations
ALIRAN, Malaysia 
Arakan League for  Democracy (ALD-LA-MALAYSIA)
Asian Migrant Centre (AMC)
Asian Migrants  Coordinating Body-Hong Kong (AMCB)
Association of Indonesian Migrant Workers in  HK (ATKI-HK)
BAYAN  USA 
BOMSA, Dhaka , Bangladesh 
BUGKOS
Canada-Philippines Solidarity  for Human Rights (Vancouver ,  BC  Canada 
Center for  Japanese-Filipino Families
Clean Clothes Campaign -International Secretariat 
Committee for Asian Women  (CAW)
Communication  Union of Australia 
Empower, Chiang Mai
Frank-Hubner-Scholl  Resistance Movement of the White Rose
Free Burma   Campaign Singapore 
Friends of Burma ,  Malaysia 
Gabriela-Taiwan
IMA Research Foundation , Bangladesh 
Institute for National  and Democratic Studies of Indonesia   (INDIES )
Interfaith Cooperation Forum
Kabalikat, A Domestic  Workers Support Network ,US 
KAFIN-Migrante (Saitama)
Labour Behind the Label, United   Kingdom 
MADPET -  Malaysians against Death Penalty and Torture 
Malaysian Trades Union  Congress (MTUC)
MAP Foundation ,Thailand 
May 1st Coalition for  Worker & Immigrant Rights, USA 
Migrante Aotearoa New Zealand 
Migrante B.C. (Canada 
Migrante Denmark 
Migrante Europe
Migrante International
Migrante-Middle East
Migrante Nagoya
Migrante Taiwan 
Migrante UK 
Migranteng Ilonggo sa Taiwan 
National League for  Democracy [NLD (LA)], Malaysia 
National Network for  Immigrant and Refugee Rights (NNIRR), U.S. 
Network of Action for  Migrants in Malaysia 
PAN Asia  and the Pacific
Parti Rakyat Malaysia 
Persatuan Kesedaran  Komuniti Selangor (EMPOWER)
Persatuan Masyarakat Malaysia 
Philippine Society in Japan 
PINAY (Filipino Women's  Organization in Quebec 
Pusat Komas
Rights Jessore , India 
Shan Refugee  Organization, Malaysia 
Suara Rakyat Malaysia  (SUARAM), Malaysia 
The Asia  Pacific Mission 
The Best Friend Library - Chiang Mai , Thailand 
The Hong Kong Coalition  for Free Burma 
Think Centre Singapore 
United Indonesians  against Overcharging (PILAR)
United Filipinos in Hong Kong  
Workers Hub for Change (WH4C)
YASANTI, Indonesia 
ZOMI National Congress-   Malaysia 
 
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