Malaysia to lift limit on hiring of foreign labor

A worker collects palm oil fruits at a plantation, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in Klang, Malaysia, on June 15, 2020. (REUTERS/Lim Huey Teng)
Short Url
Updated 14 August 2020
Follow

Malaysia to lift limit on hiring of foreign labor

  • Malaysia hosts about 2.1 million documented foreign workers

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia has decided to lift an earlier limit on the hiring of foreign workers meant to protect jobs for locals in most sectors, the Human Resources Ministry said late on Thursday.
Last month, the ministry said the hiring of foreign labor would be limited to the construction, agriculture and plantation sectors, a move to increase employment opportunities for locals affected by the coronavirus pandemic.
The ministry said more than 67,000 local workers and over 4,700 foreign workers had lost their jobs as of July.
“However, there were some employers who claim to still need a number of foreign workers and urged the government to withdraw the freeze on recruitment of new foreign workers,” Minister Saravanan Murugan said in the statement.
Saravanan urged employers to prioritize filling job vacancies with local workers before considering re-employing foreign workers who are still in Malaysia with a valid work permit.

The foreign workers, if rehired, must work in the same sectors they were previously employed in.
Malaysia hosts about 2.1 million documented foreign workers, according to government estimates.


Russia expels German diplomat in tit-for-tat move

Updated 4 sec ago
Follow

Russia expels German diplomat in tit-for-tat move

  • Moscow also rejected Germany’s accusations of espionage as “baseless” and accused Berlin of whipping up “a spirit of spy mania“
  • Germany in January summoned Russia’s ambassador and ordered the expulsion of a diplomat

MOSCOW: Russia said Thursday it was expelling a German diplomat after Berlin last month threw out a Russian official it accused of being a spy handler.
The foreign ministry said it had issued a “note declaring a diplomatic employee of the German Embassy in Moscow persona non grata” in what was a “symmetrical response.”
Moscow also rejected Germany’s accusations of espionage as “baseless” and accused Berlin of whipping up “a spirit of spy mania.”
Germany in January summoned Russia’s ambassador and ordered the expulsion of a diplomat suspected of being the handler of a woman arrested on espionage charges.
Russia at the time dismissed the allegations as baseless and vowed a response.
German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul on Thursday called the expulsion “completely unacceptable.”
“While our diplomats abide by the law, Russia relies on escalation and espionage under the guise of diplomacy,” Wadephul said during a visit to Brunei.
Wadephul said that “Russia’s latest unfriendly act... merely demonstrates once again that Russia prioritizes unjustified retaliation over diplomacy,” and added that “we reserve the right to take further action.”
The expelled German diplomat is part of the military attaché staff of the German Embassy in Moscow, Wadephul said.
Western states have ejected dozens of alleged Russian spies over the last decade as relations soured even before the war in Ukraine.
The expulsions have typically triggered a tit-for-tat response from Moscow.