Story by Alex Au

I’m sure readers would be interested in an update of the China workers issue before I fly off. 

Friday, 5 December: After the morning’s interview with Yawning Bread, the men went off to the Ministry of Manpower again, to ask for another appointment date. They met with the same officer whom I called “Chen” in the earlier article, but whose name I have now established, is Mr A K Tan.

Tan gave them a new appointment date for Wednesday, 10 December. He issued a letter with four originals, one each for the four China workers who were still free. As you will recall from the earlier article, two others were already in detention at the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority (ICA).

Each of the men had photocopies of the letter made. This letter should be useful in case the employer’s security agents nab them and hand them over to the police.

Saturday, 6 December: Stephanie Chok, the tireless volunteer, received word that Xue Hanming and Yang Zhiqiang were being held at Xuyi, the employer’s office. The employer wanted them to sign an agreement to be paid (a sum that the men did not agree with) and repatriated. The men refused and Xuyi was calling the police.

She and Russell Heng, treasurer of Transient Workers Count Too (TWC2), rushed to Xuyi’s Joo Chiat office. They arrived at about the same time as two police officers. Two other police officers were already in the office. Other China workers were in the corridor muttering their own unhappiness with the employer.

A woman named Elsie, representing the company, objected to the presence of third parties, so Stephanie and Heng had to wait outside. Soon after, Radha Basu of the Straits Times arrived, but she didn’t get much co-operation from Elsie either.

Heng told the police that Xue and Yang had appointments at the Manpower ministry on 10 December, and so they are not illegal overstayers. They therefore shouldn’t be taken into custody. Unfortunately, Xue only had a photocopy of his letter in his possession and the police felt that they had to take the both of them in pending sight of the original letter.

The two men were then handcuffed and led out. On the way out, Xue told Stephanie to retrieve the original letter from among his possessions at a Geylang hostel. This would prove a mistake, because the employer’s representative also heard it.

For some reason, there was a little delay before Stephanie called another worker at the same hostel. It was too late! The worker there said that Xuyi supervisor Tang Xuan had just arrived to take Xue’s bag away.

(What is this? Do employers have the right to take personal property away just like that? Isn’t that theft?)

When Stephanie got there, she saw a few bags strewn about, but clearly no letter. The other workers, even though they were witnesses, were however reluctant to provide their names. “We have to earn a living,” they said.

Stephanie and Heng then proceeded to Bedok Police Station where Xue and Yang were being held. They couldn’t get to see them, but managed to speak to Winson Ng, the investigating officer. They briefed Ng about the background to this matter, and Ng helpfully explained to them what his station would be doing.

He said they would be in touch with the Ministry of Manpower to establish the status of the men. He enquired if there were any Special Passes issued for them, but when told that a certain Nigel from Manpower had said the Special Passes had been issued to the employer (see previous article), he remarked that he found it strange too.

(Later, I will explain why I think no Special Passes were ever issued.)

Ng said that if the police manage to establish that the men were not illegal overstayers, they would release them to their employer. Heng told him that this would expose them to the risk of being detained by Xuyi’s security agencies and the whole drama would repeat itself. Agreeing, Ng said sometimes the police may just release the men on their own recognition.

Sunday, 7 December: Russell Heng had a phone conversation with a Simon Ho of Bedok Police Station. When Ho understood that while Xue’s original letter from the Manpower ministry could not be located, Liu Xiaoping had an identical original, Ho agreed that Liu’s letter would satisfy him of the appointment at Manpower on 10 December.

Stephanie then went to get hold of Liu and his original letter, and brought both to Bedok Police Station.

By the time she got there, the police had decided to release Xue and Yang without even seeing the letter. This was because Ho had managed to contact someone at Manpower to verify the facts. Ho also explained -– for once, somebody does -– a little about the system.

Apparently, after an employer cancels a worker’s t [1], the police recognise a grace period of one month, to allow the individual to sort out matters and leave in an orderly fashion. They won’t arrest the individual for overstaying during that one month.

In Xue Hanming’s case, his Work Permit was apparently cancelled by his employer on 7 November 2008 -– that’s about as soon as Xue lodged his complaint with the Ministry of Manpower. So on that same day as they were speaking (7 December), his one month grace period had expired. However, since he had a letter from Manpower setting an appointment date of 10 December, this would suffice for now.

In Yang Zhiqiang’s case, the employer cancelled his Work Permit on 10 November 2008. He would be considered an overstayer after 10 December.

Stephanie thought that Ho’s manner was genial. Xue and Yang too said that the police were very civil throughout their stay in the lock-up. It was clean, they said, and they were fed, though they felt the portions were a bit small.

* * * * *

In the meantime, there has been no news whatsoever about Cheng Yuguang and Xue Chengming, the two workers seized earlier by the employer’s security agents. The last anyone heard, they were being held at the ICA.

Have they been deported? No one seems to know.

The remaining two guys, Tian Suyun and Liu Xiaoping, have fled the company-supplied accommodation and are staying with friends. They remain in contact with TWC2 and Stephanie. Xue Hanming and Yang Zhiqiang are obviously not going to return to the company-supplied accommodation either.

The men have made it clear that they have no intention of overstaying; in fact they want to go home to China, but also want to be paid their just amounts before they are sent home.

In the remaining few days, they will obviously have to try harder through the Manpower ministry or other means, to get the matter resolved to their satisfaction. What happens next, we shall see.

* * * * *

The picture is a little clearer now, but so are the crevices through which workers can fall through.

We learn from this story that Work Permits can be cancelled at any time by the employer, and apparently nobody has any responsibility to inform the worker that his Work Permit has been cancelled, and his one-month grace period is ticking. One morning, you can transition into an illegal overstayer without even knowing it, and be liable for imprisonment and caning.

By the way, the men’s passports are still with the employer; the practice is that employers keep all their workers’ passports. It seems strange to me that Singapore allows this to happen. There must be some human right violated that a critical identity document should be taken out of a person’s hands.

It is doubtful if there were ever any Special Passes issued for these workers. The information attributed to the “Nigel” from Manpower must be defective. In any case, as I understand it, a Special Pass is normally issued only to a foreign worker if he or she is needed to stay on in Singapore as a prosecution witness in a criminal case; for example, if a domestic worker needs to testify that she has been physically abused by her employer.

These men are not bringing forward a criminal case (but see my comments below). It would therefore seem odd that Special Passes appear to figure in the story. 

The men were at a disadvantage because they were ignorant of how the system works, and they largely wasted their one-month grace period (which they probably didn’t know about) hoping that the Manpower ministry would help them resolve their dispute with Xuyi.

The Manpower ministry probably felt it was not their job to pressure the employer to solve the matter within one month. 

As for the employer, my guess is that they probably thought they could stonewall the workers’ claims for one month and then rely on the police and ICA to arrest and deport the men after that. Under duress, the men would have to agree to whatever little the company was prepared to pay them.

The system is therefore loaded against the worker.

* * * * *

But why wasn’t it made into a criminal case from the start? The men’s complaints were threefold:

Their salaries had not been paid for three months; 
The employer was making deductions the men did not agree to; 
The employer was not computing for overtime in the salary calculations, when they were working as many as 88 hours a week.

The second might be a civil dispute, but the first and third were violations of the Employment Act.

Sections 20 and 21 of the Act says:

20. (1) An employer may fix periods, which for the purpose of this Act shall be called salary periods, in respect of which salary earned shall be payable.

(2) No salary period shall exceed one month.

(3) In the absence of a salary period so fixed the salary period shall be deemed to be one month.

21. (1) Salary earned by an employee under a contract of service, other than additional payments for overtime work, shall be paid before the expiry of the 7th day after the last day of the salary period in respect of which the salary is payable.

(2) Additional payments for overtime work shall be paid not later than 14 days after the last day of the salary period during which the overtime work was performed.

As for overtime pay, Section 38 (subsection 4) says,

38. -(4) If an employee at the request of the employer works 

(b) more than 44 hours in one week….he shall be paid for such extra work at the rate of not less than one and a half times his hourly basic rate of pay …

As mentioned in the earlier article, the men had also worked every day for months without a day off. This violates the Employment Act too.

36. (1) Every employee shall be allowed in each week a rest day without pay of one whole day which shall be Sunday or such other day as may be determined from time to time by the employer.

(2) The employer may substitute any continuous period of 30 hours as a rest day for an employee engaged in shift work.

As for the deductions, this could conceivably be a criminal matter as well, because the Act says,

26. No deductions other than deductions authorised under the provisions of this Act shall be made by an employer from the salary of an employee.

The Act lists what it considers authorised deductions, including accommodation, meals, absence from work, provident fund payments, etc. Since I do not know the nature of the deductions the employer is making, I can offer no view whether they are in violation of the law or not.

Still, it does seem strange, doesn’t it, that the Manpower ministry is merely trying to mediate the matter, when there is a case to prosecute the employer under the Employment Act for delaying wages and not computing overtime pay. Why hasn’t it done so?

If it had, the employer could not then rely on the stonewall strategy. It would have to settle fairly and promptly or face the law.

 



 

Footnotes

  1.  The reports reaching me still speak of “Special Passes”, but the more I think about it, the more unlikely it seems to me that there were every any Special Passes. So I shall refer from this point on, to them as Work Permits, though I’m not sure if that is 100% correct.
    Return to where you left off

 

———–

Channel 8’s Liang Kaixin and a camera crew were also at Bedok Police Station. They took some footage and did an interview or two.

However, Russell Heng learnt from them that they also needed to get the Manpower ministry’s response to their queries before they could air, and as at the time of writing this piece, more than 48 hours later, it hasn’t aired yet.

Frankly, this is another problem with our mainstream media’s editorial policies — policies no doubt laid down from on high.

What if the Manpower ministry doesn’t respond? The story will be suspended indefinitely. Then, at some point, the men will be deported, and editors may decide, oh well, the story is moot.

If so, Singaporeans mayl never learn of the affair.

* * *

In the earlier article, I mentioned that a New Paper reporter was also there at the Friday morning interview. As far as I can see, the story did not appear on Saturday, nor on Sunday. Why?

——-

Stephanie also learnt from casual conversation with other Xuyi workers that the batch who arrived in September have yet to be paid.

It looks like another case is brewing.

 ——-

Read also:

Muddy Singapore swallows China workers by Alex Au

179 foreign workers abandoned by employer by Boris Chan.

Rights groups call for tighter regulations by TWC2 & HOME.

Singapore is my second home by Ching Ann Jie

TOC Expose: Repatriation companies by Jolovan Wham.

A 19th century page from a 21st century draft by Ng Sook Zhen.

“I hope Singapore government punish them” by Andrew Loh.

The Story of Delowar by Deborah Choo.

Mega Development projects and labour supply chains – who is responsible? by Stephanie Chok.

Sent home with $600 by Deborah Choo.

 ———

 

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
You May Also Like

Clutching at straws – Shanmugam’s hollow defence of PAP media myths

Pritam Singh In a talk entitled “The Role of the Media: Singapore’s…

Singapore: a strange brew

Lonely Planet lists Singapore as top 10 city for travel. Ravi Philemon

Floods: Monitor or don’t monitor also flood?

By Leong Sze Hian “I think the response by the PUB, by…

MP wasn’t aware of herb garden removal

Matter could have been handled better, says MP Lee Bee Wah.