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Malaysia must slash fees, smash posters to reopen Bangladesh labor market: rights groups

Migrant workers from Bangladesh should no longer be forced to cover the costs of job placements in Malaysiarights advocates say, as they push for sweeping reforms to safeguard laborers and dismantle the corrupt recruitment networks that have made fortunes from their exploitation.
The appeal comes as Malaysia’s Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim is set to visit Bangladesh on Friday and meet with the country’s chief adviser to the government, Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus, who has been in charge since August collapse of Sheikh Hasina’s government following a nationwide protest movement against her regime.

Hasina stands accused of overseeing widespread corruption, including in the multibillion-dollar migrant labor sector.

“It is vital that the Madani administration fully cooperates with Muhammad Yunus to expose the Malaysian side of the labor cartels, especially high level officials and organized criminals involved,” migrant rights activist and North South Initiative executive director Adrian Pereria told This Week in Asia, referring to Anwar’s “Madani” framework of inclusive governance and social justice .

“There must be no compromise and zero tolerance of such systemic exploitation.”