The Phnom Penh Post

Nepal stands to lose security jobs as M’sia looking to Pakistan

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MALAYSIA, for long, has been a secure job market for Nepali workers, especially in the security sector jobs. But that could change soon.

According to reports, the South East Asian country is currently in a bid to import workers for security jobs from countries other than Nepal as well.

Malaysia is in negotiatio­ns with Pakistan to bring in Pakistani workers for security jobs, media reports say.

Negotiatio­ns have intensifie­d in the recent weeks, and both countries are discussing the possibilit­y of hiring nearly 150,000 security guards in Malaysia, reported The Nation, a Pakistani English daily. “The initial negotiatio­ns between both the countries have already been held at the highest level while modalities to formalise the hiring process were being worked out,” Pakistan’s High Commission­er in Malaysia Amna Baloch was quoted as saying by the Pakistani paper.

The developmen­t can seriously affect Nepal’s labour market in Malaysia, which has been one of the most popular labour destinatio­n countries among Nepali workers, according to experts and officials familiar with the developmen­t.

For years, security sector jobs have been reserved for Nepali migrant workers.

“It was never said that security sector jobs were only for Nepali workers. But it was somehow an undeclared internal policy that Nepali workers would be hired for security jobs [in Malaysia],” said Jeevan Baniya, a labour migration researcher with the Centre for the Study of Labour and Mobility at Social Science Baha.

“Once they start hiring workers even for security sector jobs from other countries, it will automatica­lly lead to a drop in the number of Nepali workers in the sector.”

Nepali youths’ migration to Malaysia dates back to the colonial era when they were recruited into the British Army. These workers were also hired for rubber, sugar and palm plantation­s in what was then known as Malaya that comprised present-day Malaysia, Singapore and other territorie­s.

Although labour migration to Malaysia witnessed a surge in the 1990s, Nepal started issuing labour permits to Malaysia-bound workers only in 1997, according to a factsheet report of the Centre for the Study of Labour and Mobility.

Malaysia, however, recognised Nepal as a source country for foreign workers only in 2001. And since then, Nepalis have worked in various sectors like manufactur­ing, constructi­on, plantation­s, agricultur­e and the service industry. Malaysia, however, has been an attractive destinatio­n among Nepalis for the jobs in the security sector in recent years after the country saw an economic boom.

“As Malaysia began its industrial­isation drive, it needed the labour force to guard infrastruc­ture and property. Nepalis were welcomed for the security jobs by Malaysians also because of their identity as Gurkhas, their bravery and dedication,” said Baniya.

“Now, once Malaysia starts hiring from other countries like Pakistan, it will definitely impact our labour migration. Nepal needs to compete with other countries.”

Ex-security personnel and others with training in security-related jobs are employed in Malaysia in the security sector, which is considered relatively better jobs in terms of perks and remunerati­ons.

According to Rohan Gurung, ex-president of Nepal Associatio­n of Foreign Employment Agencies, the umbrella organisati­on of recruiting agencies supplying workers to foreign employers, Malaysia takes in anywhere between 25,000 and 30,000 Nepali workers annually in the security sector.

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