The Borneo Post

Human Resources Ministry to amend or upgrade nine Acts

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PUTRAJAYA: The Human Resources Ministry is in the process to amend or upgrade nine Acts by end of this year, said its minister M. Kulasegara­n.

He said the amendments need to be made to raise the labour standards in Malaysia to be in line with the Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on ( ILO) Convention, and because the current laws, including the Children and Young Persons Act ( Employment) Act 1966, were outdated and overdue for change.

The ministry is currently studying the possible amendments, which would also take proposals from all related parties into considerat­ion. M. Kulasegara­n, Human Resources Minister

Other laws to be revised were Occupation­al Safety & Health Act 1994, Employment Act 1955, Sabah Labour Ordinance, Sarawak Labour Ordinance, Industrial Relations Act 1967, Trade Unions Act 1959, Minimum Standard of Housing & Amenities Act 1990, and Private Recruitmen­t Agencies Act 1981.

“The ministry is currently studying the possible amendments, which would also take proposals from all related parties into considerat­ion,” he told reporters after launching the World Day Against Child Labour 2018 here yesterday.

Kulasegara­n hoped to table the amendments to the nine laws in the next Parliament sitting in October.

On the Child Labour Act , he said he had instructed his officers to undertake stringent enforcemen­t task against those who did not comply with labour regulation­s including recruiting children as workers.

“Between 2016 and 2018, there were five cases in relation to child labour and last year alone, two employers were fined RM2,000 each,” he said.

Kulasegara­n admitted that a number of factors made child labours in agricultur­e, plantation and rural areas particular­ly difficult to eliminate.

“Therefore, regular enforcemen­t is the key to ensure children are protected and to ensure no child is recruited as a labourer,” he said.

Commenting on the misappropr­iation of the RM300 million fund belonging to Human Resources Developmen­t Fund, Kulasegara­n said the full report on the matter would be completed by end of next month and necessary actions would be taken as suggested.

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