Jakarta Globe, SP/Novianti Setuningsih, Nov 21, 2014
Jakarta. Indonesia plans to end the practice of sending female workers (TKW) abroad by creating more job opportunities here, Vice President Jusuf Kalla said on Friday.
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| Vice President Jusuf Kalla talking with citizens concerned over rising fuel prices, in Jakarta on Wednesday. (Antara Photo/Setwapres/Jeri Wongiyanto) |
Jakarta. Indonesia plans to end the practice of sending female workers (TKW) abroad by creating more job opportunities here, Vice President Jusuf Kalla said on Friday.
Speaking at
a conference of the women’s organization of Nahdlatul Ulama (Fatayat NU), Kalla
said women are mostly forced to seek a better future abroad because of limited
opportunities in Indonesia, and that many suffer mental and physical abuse.
“We will
end all of this [bad treatment of workers],” the vice president said. “The
problems with the TKW [will end], in five years we must [stop sending them]
abroad.”
Kalla said
that the agriculture sector would be a primary source of future jobs, followed
by light industrial work.
The lot of
the migrant worker is a major political issue in Indonesia. While remittances
sent by construction workers and domestic workers from abroad has had an
important impact on raising hundreds of thousands of families out of poverty,
migrant workers often fall victim to abuse and in many cases have to surrender
their passports to either agents or employers.
Extreme
cases such as the recent murders of two Indonesian women in Hong Kong,
allegedly at the hands of a British banker, occasionally make international
headlines, but the domestic press is never short on stories of abuse.
Advocacy
group Migrant Care estimates that every day between 400 to 500 Indonesian
migrant workers are extorted by security and immigration officers on their
return to Indonesia.
The group
has recorded more than 1,000 extortion cases over the last ten years, which are
said to involve police and military officials as well as from other government
agencies.
“Everyday,
400 to 500 TKI [Indonesian migrant workers] are extorted,” Migrant Care
chairwoman Anis Hidayah said in August. The figure, she said, represented 45
percent of Indonesian migrant workers returning home everyday. The extortion
scheme “is systematic,” Anis continued.
The
culprits, Anis alleged, are from the military, police, the Manpower and
Transmigration Ministry and the Indonesian Workers Placement and Protection
Agency (BNP2TKI).
Earlier
this month, the newly inaugurated minister of manpower and transmigration,
Hanif Dhakiri, pledged to audit all migrant worker placement agencies in a bid
to crack down on widespread extortion.
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