http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2012/3/7/nation/10866352&sec=nation
Wednesday March 7, 2012
Subra: Agreement on maid stays
By JOSEPH SIPALAN and P. ARUNA 
[email protected]


PUTRAJAYA: Malaysia will continue to pursue its current maid agreement with 
Indonesia until and unless the latter changes its policy, said Human Resources 
Minister Datuk Seri Dr S. Subramaniam.

He said the Indonesian government had not given any indication of a supposed 
roadmap to stop sending maids to several countries, including Malaysia, by 2017.

“At the present moment, we will go by what has been discussed and signed, and 
what has been endorsed by our Prime Minister and Indonesia's President,” he 
said after chairing a National Labour Advisory Council meeting here yesterday.

Subramaniam was commenting on a report by a local daily yesterday, which 
claimed that Indonesia had laid down a roadmap to almost entirely stop sending 
maids abroad by 2017.

The minister noted that Malaysia would not be able to do much should its 
neighbours decide to change its policy on Indonesian migrant workers in the 
domestic sector.

“If Indonesia changes its policy, then we will just have to live with it,” he 
said.

Subramaniam pointed out that Malaysia still had other source countries for 
maids, such as the Philippines, Sri Lanka, India and Cambodia, as options.

However, he added that Malaysians may eventually have to accept the possibility 
that hiring a maid would become too expensive.

Meanwhile, maid agencies in Indonesia claim they would suffer losses if they 
supply domestic workers at the price agreed upon in the memorandum of 
understanding (MoU) with Malaysia.

The agencies said the delay in the entry of maids into Malaysia was due to the 
price agreed in the MoU, and not because of incomplete applications submitted 
by the Malaysian side as reported.

Malaysian National Association of Employment Agencies (Pikap) said their 
counterparts in Indonesia had informed them they were unable to send the maids 
for the agreed price.

“They told us the cost of recruiting and training maids was too high and it was 
unrealistic for them to supply the maids to us at the price agreed in the MoU,” 
said Pikap secretary Lim Mei Yun yesterday.

On another matter, she said Pikap had received almost 12,000 requests from 
Malaysians who wanted to hire Indonesian maids.

“We have registered these employers and placed them on a waiting list,” she 
said. 


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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