The Ministry of Labor is in talks about introducing workers from Myanmar to mitigate the impact of an expected shortage of domestic workers, Deputy Minister of Labor Chen I-min (陳益民) said on Friday.
Chen’s comments were made in response to Indonesia’s recently announced plans to gradually stop sending domestic caretakers to Taiwan, starting from 2017.
During an interview with Indonesian Web site Liputan6 on Wednesday, Agency of Placement and Protection of Indonesian Migrant Workers head Nusron Wahi said that Indonesia is to follow Indonesian President Joko Widodo’s policy of bringing Indonesian domestic caretakers back home.
Indonesia is to stop sending domestic caretakers to the Middle East this year, while a ban on those in the Asia-Pacific region — including Taiwan, Hong Kong and Malaysia — will be gradually implemented starting in 2017, Wahid said.
He added that Indonesia would focus on exporting skilled labor in the future by providing migrant workers with training programs, saying that the policy would help Indonesians receive better salaries abroad.
Widodo has made the protection of the rights of Indonesian migrant workers one of his top priorities since he was inaugurated as president in October last year, saying that the issue was “a matter of national dignity.”
Last year, the case of Erwiana Sulistyaningsih, an Indonesian maid in Hong Kong who was brutally tortured by her employer over the course of eight months, sparked a public outcry in Indonesia and other migrant worker-exporting nations.
As of last month, among a total of more than 500,000 migrant workers in Taiwan, about 220,000 were employed as domestic caretakers, including more than 170,000 Indonesians.
Foreign domestic caretakers in Taiwan typically receive a monthly wage of about NT$15,840, well below the minimum wage of NT$19,273. Unlike migrant workers employed in manufacturing, domestic caretakers are not protected under the Labor Standards Act (勞動基準法), which caps work hours at 84 hours every two weeks.
In December last year, Wahid told Taiwan’s Central News Agency that Indonesia would reconsider its plans if Taiwan engages in reforms to improve the working conditions of migrant workers by ensuring that wages for Indonesian domestic caretakers fulfill minimum-wage requirements, that work hours are limited to a level consistent with local law and that domestic caretakers are housed in dormitories.
Chen on Friday said that the Ministry of Labor is still working on a draft version of the Domestic Worker Protection Act (家事勞工保護法), adding that the ministry fully supports equal rights for migrant workers.
However, the ministry’s plans to introduce migrant workers from Myanmar or other nations provoked serious criticism from labor rights advocates.
“The most shameful part is that not only does [the government] take no action on reforming a system that is akin to slave labor, but now we’re trotting around the globe to find new sources of slave labor,” Taiwan International Workers’ Association researcher Wu Jing-ru (吳靜如) said.
Actor Darren Wang (王大陸) was sentenced to six months in prison, commutable to a fine, by the New Taipei District Court today for contravening the Personal Data Protection Act (個人資料保護法) in a case linked to an alleged draft-dodging scheme. Wang allegedly paid NT$3.6 million (US$114,380) to an illegal group to help him evade mandatory military service through falsified medical documents, prosecutors said. He transferred the funds to Chen Chih-ming (陳志明), the alleged mastermind of a draft-evasion ring, although he lost contact with him as he was already in detention on fraud charges, they said. Chen is accused of helping a
SECURITY: Starlink owner Elon Musk has taken pro-Beijing positions, and allowing pro-China companies to control Taiwan’s critical infrastructure is risky, a legislator said Starlink was reluctant to offer services in Taiwan because of the nation’s extremely high penetration rates in 4G and 5G services, the Ministry of Digital Affairs said yesterday. The ministry made the comments at a meeting of the legislature’s Transportation Committee, which reviewed amendments to Article 36 of the Telecommunications Management Act (電信管理法). Article 36 bans foreigners from holding more than 49 percent of shares in public telecommunications networks, while shares foreigners directly and indirectly hold are also capped at 60 percent of the total, unless specified otherwise by law. The amendments, sponsored by Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Legislator Ko
The eastern extension of the Taipei MRT Red Line could begin operations as early as late June, the Taipei Department of Rapid Transit Systems said yesterday. Taipei Rapid Transit Corp said it is considering offering one month of free rides on the new section to mark its opening. Construction progress on the 1.4km extension, which is to run from the current terminal Xiangshan Station to a new eastern terminal, Guangci/Fengtian Temple Station, was 90.6 percent complete by the end of last month, the department said in a report to the Taipei City Council's Transportation Committee. While construction began in October 2016 with an
NON-RED SUPPLY: Boosting the nation’s drone industry is becoming increasingly urgent as China’s UAV dominance could become an issue in a crisis, an analyst said Taiwan’s drone exports to Europe grew 41.7-fold from 2024 to last year, with demand from Ukraine’s fight against Russian aggression the most likely driver of growth, a study showed. The Institute for Democracy, Society and Emerging Technology (DSET) in a statement on Wednesday said it found that many of Taiwan’s uncrewed aerial vehicle (UAV) sales were from Poland and the Czech Republic. These countries likely transferred the drones to Ukraine to aid it in its fight against the Russian invasion that started in 2022, it said. Despite the gains, Taiwan is not the dominant drone exporter to these markets, ranking second and fourth