Weekend Herald

Migrant exploitati­on penalised

- Lincoln Tan

An Auckland restaurate­ur was sentenced to six months’ home detention and ordered to pay $ 2500 in reparation on immigratio­n and exploitati­on charges yesterday.

Rupinder Singh Chahil, 44, was the third person involved with Auckland Indian restaurant chain, Masala, to have been found guilty of underpayin­g and exploiting migrant workers.

Chahil, a NZ citizen, was sentenced at the Auckland District Court after pleading guilty at an earlier hearing to a representa­tive charge of providing false or misleading informatio­n to an immigratio­n officer.

The court heard that one staff member, an Indian national, was made to work about 66 hours a week and was paid around $ 3 an hour.

Chahil offered the staff member, named only as Robin, to work as an assistant manager at the Mission Bay Masala Restaurant.

He signed all the documents under the name of Joti Jain, a director and shareholde­r of Goldlink Enterprise­s Limited, and was also the employer of workers at the Masala chain.

These documents were given to the worker who forwarded them to Immigratio­n New Zealand ( INZ).

The offer of employment and agreement stated the worker would be paid as assistant manager at $ 15 per hour for a 30- to 40- hour week.

But the staffer, who was granted a two- year work visa to January 2013, continued to be employed as a waitress and also had to occasional­ly clean Jain’s house.

By the time she left her job after 10 months she was owed wages and holiday pay of more than $ 23,000.

Jain was sentenced in October last year to 11 months’ home detention, 220 hours’ community work and ordered to pay almost $ 58,000 reparation. A second defendant, Rajwinder Singh Grewal, was sentenced to four and a half month’s home detention and ordered to pay almost $ 5000 reparation.

An investigat­ion by Immigratio­n New Zealand found that in all, four Indian nationals were significan­tly underpaid between 2012 and 2014.

They were forced to under- record the hours they worked, return some of their pay to their employer and were not paid any holiday pay.

Immigratio­n Assistant General Manager Peter Devoy said the sentences sent a very strong message that migrant exploitati­on will not be tolerated.

“The overriding principle is that migrant workers have the same employment rights as all other workers in New Zealand,” Devoy said.

“We will not tolerate employers who exploit migrant labour for their own commercial advantage and will not hesitate to prosecute in cases where warranted.”

 ?? Picture / Nick Reed ?? Rupinder Singh Chahil got six months detention and must pay $ 2500 reparation on immigratio­n and exploitati­on charges.
Picture / Nick Reed Rupinder Singh Chahil got six months detention and must pay $ 2500 reparation on immigratio­n and exploitati­on charges.

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