A trainee maid receives instructions from a supervisor while practicing skills at a training school in Phnom Penh in 2013. Pha Lina
6 Jan, 2016 Sen David and Charles Rollet PPP
Cambodian
recruitment agencies are drawing up more extensive training programs
for maids being sent to Malaysia following a lifting of a ban on the
practice in December.
However,
it remains unclear by what standards the programs created by the
agencies – many of which have been accused of abuses in the past – will
be evaluated.
Cambodian
firms were ban-ned in 2011 from sending domestic workers to Malaysia
following numerous reports of abuse. The ban was lifted in a memorandum
of understanding [MoU] signed with Malaysia last month.
Labour
Minister Ith Samheng said in a speech last week that the roughly 30
recruitment companies interested in sending maids to Malaysia would be
required to beef up their training programs in preparation for mid-2016,
when the MoU will be implemented.
An
Bun Hak, director of firm Top Manpower, confirmed the move, saying his
firm’s training period had been increased from under three months to
“four to six” months.
“We will train them about the [Malaysian] language, culture and housework skills,” he said.
Each
company will be able to draw up its own program, which will then be
sent for approval by the ministry prior to implementation.
Phil
Robertson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch, noted that maid
training itself has been rife with allegations of mistreatment and urged
the new trainings have clear guidelines.
“Providing
maids with skills training before they depart is helpful, but the costs
of the training programs should be paid by the agencies and not the
women themselves, and should explicitly ensure these women have freedom
of movement and the manpower agencies don’t lock them in away in their
centers during ‘training’ – as has been done in the past,” he wrote in
an email.
In
2010, the Post reported allegations that recruitment firm VC Manpower
was locking its trainees inside their facility at night after one woman
injured her back while trying to escape.
Top
Manpower’s Bun Hak said his firm’s training would be paid for by
deducting from workers’ future earnings, adding that there were no
specific lessons on what to do in case of abuse, an issue he said would
be addressed by the time of the MoU’s implementation.
Moeun
Tola, executive director of labour rights NGO Central said that while
additional training might help, consistently monitoring the condition of
each worker on the ground was key to staunching employer abuse.
“The two governments need to talk seriously about how to monitor whether the MoU is being respected.”

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