The Star Malaysia

Bestinet fails to reverse Nepal’s worker ban

- By ELAN PERUMAL elan@thestar.com.my

PETALING JAYA: A meeting between Bestinet Sdn Bhd and Nepal government officials to reverse a decision to bar its workers from coming to Malaysia has failed to yield any result.

Bestinet chief executive officer Ismail Mohd Noor said the company attempted to resolve the matter with Nepalese Embassy officials yesterday.

However, he said Bestinet failed to secure a resolution to the matter.

He added an embassy official told him that the matter could only be resolved through discussion­s between the two government­s.

“We have explained the role of Bestinet to them and they understood our situation,” he said yesterday after the meeting at the embassy.

The Star had reported on July 28 on the Nepal government’s move to bar its workers from coming to Malaysia with immediate effect.

The move comes as the Nepalese government expressed its unhappines­s with “restrictiv­e” immigratio­n requiremen­ts its workers faced before they could be gainfully employed in this country.

It includes having to go through a private company for security and medical check-ups as part of the visa requiremen­t.

Nepal Embassy labour attache Sanmaya Ramtel confirmed that her government had indefinite­ly barred its citizens from seeking employment in Malaysia.

She said her government had identified several discrepanc­ies in the recruitmen­t process of migrant workers in Malaysia.

“The Nepalese government does not understand why the Malaysian Government is allowing a private company to monopolise the recruitmen­t process.

“Our government also feels that the company’s presence is a virtual monopoly as other companies are not allowed to carry out the screening and this contribute­s to higher cost for the workers,” she said.

In an interview yesterday, Chirara Kannan, the owner of a consultanc­y service for employers, said Nepalese workers had stopped coming to Malaysia because of their government’s stand against the Malaysian Government’s policy which required migrant workers to go through Bestinet.

Meanwhile, Bestinet executive director Datuk V. Rathakrish­nan denied the company’s involvemen­t in the foreign worker recruitmen­t industry.

“Bestinet is not involved in the foreign worker recruitmen­t process. It only provides the biometric screening service,” he said, adding the company provided the Foreign Workers Centralise­d Management System (FWCMS) that enabled the biometric screening and e-registrati­on of foreign workers to the country.

Rathakrish­nan also commented on the FWCMS system, which, through the Applicatio­n for Employment of Foreign Workers (SPPA), only referred employers to 10 companies that had been designated as the sole authorised agents for the hiring of Bangladesh­i workers to Malaysia.

“There was nothing that we could do about the agreement because we have to follow the Home Ministry’s directive,” he said.

Bestinet, Rathakrish­nan said, was prepared to hold talks with Human Resources Minister M. Kulasegara­n to clarify its position.

Kulasegara­n told the Dewan Rakyat that the Home Ministry would brief the Cabinet this Friday on the Nepal government’s decision to bar its workers from coming to Malaysia.

 ??  ?? Finding a solution: Kulasegara­n arriving at Parliament. He said he would brief the Cabinet this Friday on the Nepal government’s decision.
Finding a solution: Kulasegara­n arriving at Parliament. He said he would brief the Cabinet this Friday on the Nepal government’s decision.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia