Illegal Nepali workers in Malaysia can return home
THOUSANDS of Nepali migrant workers, who have violated immigration rules in Malaysia and are liable to legal action, will be able to return home following the Malaysian government’s announcement of a general amnesty scheme for undocumented foreigners.
The five-month-long amnesty scheme called Program Back for Good will provide illegal foreigners an opportunity to return to their respective home countries before the Malaysian government cracks down on them and makes arrests.
An estimated 15,000-20,000 Nepali migrant workers who are overstaying their visit or are living without valid documents in Malaysia can make use of the latest amnesty.
“There is no exact data on the number of Nepali workers who have overstayed in Malaysia. However, this amnesty is a good opportunity for them to utilise the scheme and return to Nepal,” Maheshwar Mani Tripathi, second secretary at the Embassy of Nepal in Malaysia, told the Post over the phone.
The amnesty will be applicable from August 1 to December 31.
To avail of the scheme, undocumented foreigners will have to pay a 700 ringgit ($170) fine and get the special exit pass from the Malaysian Immigration Department.
Nepali workers without any valid documents or passports will have to first get the oneway travel document from the Nepal Embassy.
In the past, the Malaysian authorities had launched a massive crackdown on illegal foreigners in t he countr y.
According to Malaysian Immigration Department statistics, there were 385,000 documented Nepali workers as of July last year. The department had also estimated that more than 1.7 million foreigners were legally working in Malaysia during the same period.
“There is no third party or outsourcing company involved this time. The immigration department will set up 80 counters across the country where applicants can register for repatriation under t he amnesty,” Tripat hi said.
The Malaysian government had iterated on many occasions in the past that there would not be another similar amnesty for expatriates violating the country’s immigration laws after the previous amnesty expired in July last year.
During the previous Voluntary Deportation Programme, also calledthe“3-plus-1”programme, Malaysia had given options to illegal immigrants to either avoid legal actions by choosing to return to their home countries or obtain legal status through the rehiring programme.
The amnesty had also permitted undocumented workers, who could not rejoin their workplace or failed to find a new employer, to leave the country by August 30 last year without facing any legal actions. This year, however, illegal immigrants will be blacklisted and barred from entering Malaysia for an indefinite period.
According to the Nepal Embassy, nearly 15,000 illegal Nepali workers had used the amnesty last year.