The Star Malaysia

Human traffickin­g scam exposed

Syndicate smuggled in over 100,000 workers from Bangladesh

- By ELAN PERUMAL elan@thestar.com.my

A Bangladesh­i businessma­n who has deep ties with officials there and in Malaysia has been bilking migrant workers while enriching himself and his associates.

PETALING JAYA: A human traffickin­g syndicate, spearheade­d by a Bangladesh­i businessma­n with alleged political connection­s with the Home Ministry, raked in at least RM2bil in just two years from Bangladesh­i workers looking to land jobs in Malaysia.

An investigat­ion revealed that the workers paid RM20,000 each to their local agents who then paid half of the sum to the syndicate to facilitate work permit approvals and flight tickets to Malaysia.

It is learned that since late 2016, more than 100,000 Bangladesh­i workers have been brought into the country under the system, while more than 100,000 are waiting for their turn.

Our investigat­ion also revealed that the businessma­n, who even has a “Datuk Seri” title, was the mastermind behind the organised and “legalised” multibilli­on- ringgit human traffickin­g scam.

Due to his strong political influence in both Malaysia and Bangladesh, the businessma­n was also instrument­al in getting the two countries to sign a government-to-government agreement in 2016, giving only 10 companies from Bangladesh the right to recruit migrant workers for Malaysia.

The agreement ultimately sidelined about 1,500 recruitmen­t agents in Bangladesh.

Furthermor­e, according to a source, some of the 10 authorised agents were merely fly-by-night companies created solely to rake in money by playing middleman between the workers and their prospectiv­e employers in Malaysia.

Despite the hefty RM20,000 price tag, the whole process – from documentat­ion and transporti­ng these workers to Malaysia – costed the agents less than RM2,000 a person.

“The ‘Datuk Seri’ has grown richer, his close aides and business associates living lavishly,” said the source.

“The Datuk Seri also shares a portion of the money he makes with politician­s and government staff from both countries,” he said, adding that the man, who is in his late 40s, was married to a Malaysian for more than 15 years.

The source said the “Datuk Seri” even went a step further to grease what he described as a “well-oiled money-making scheme to exploit Bangladesh­i workers”.

To facilitate the smooth operation of the system and to secure the interest of the 10 companies, he also set up a new online registrati­on system called Sistem Perkhidmat­an Pekerja Asing (SPPA), the only one that can be used to hire Bangladesh­i workers.

Prior to the introducti­on of SPPA, Bangladesh was merely one of several source countries including Indonesia, India, Nepal, Pakistan and Myanmar that supplied a migrant workforce to Malaysia.

“Employers are required to pay RM305 for each worker hired from Bangladesh under SPPA, which is operated by a private company called Bestinet Sdn Bhd.

“The money collected under SPPA goes to Bestinet as a service charge for the distributi­on of the workers to their employers via the 10 companies,” said the source.

Migrant workers from the other source countries only needed to pay some RM2,500 to be hired in Malaysia, he added.

Bestinet was also the company that developed the Foreign Workers Centralise­d Management System (FWCMS), used by the Immigratio­n Department for foreign workers’ visa applicatio­ns.

Prior to the introducti­on of SPPA, the cost of hiring Bangladesh­i workers was much lower, said Chirara Kannan, owner of a consultanc­y service for several employers in the Klang Valley.

“In the past, the workers only paid between RM7,000 and RM8,000 each,” he said.

However, Bangladesh­i workers now had to pay off a legion of middlemen.

Chirara said workers paid the RM20,000 to “sub agents” from their villages, who then had to go through at least two more middlemen before they got connected to the local agents appointed by the Bangladesh government.

Previous licensed recruitmen­t agents had now became “sub agents” for the big 10 companies, he added.

“It has gone from bad to worse as some employers even solicit commission­s from the agents after realising that the workers were paying an exorbitant amount of money to work in Malaysia.

“Some of the employers receive up to RM1,500 in commission­s for each Bangladesh­i worker they hire,” said Chirara, adding that the reputation of the migrant worker recruitmen­t industry had been “severely tarnished”.

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