Tag: discrimination

  • Nationality Based Discrimination Top Complaint Received By TAFEP, Banking And IT Sectors Most Problematic

    Nationality Based Discrimination Top Complaint Received By TAFEP, Banking And IT Sectors Most Problematic

    Alleged discrimination based on nationality continued to top the list of complaints received last year by the Tripartite Alliance for Fair and Progressive Employment Practices (TAFEP), with the banking and information technology sectors still the most problematic.

    These cases made up half of the some 300 complaints in total. However, TAFEP general manager Roslyn Ten said many stem from misunderstanding and not from genuine bias, and urged companies to improve communication with job seekers or existing employees by explaining why, for example, foreigners instead of Singaporeans were hired or promoted.

    Speaking to TODAY yesterday, she said: “Could they better explain that it’s really about the skills? Because when they hire, they just hire. They don’t really communicate why (they) hire A and not B, and why (they) promote A and not B. It’s because of the domain knowledge … that the employers require, and somehow they couldn’t find them in locals.”

    In some cases, Singaporean jobseekers may have commitments at home, and are reluctant to take up overseas postings or jobs which require frequent travelling, she said. “It’s quite difficult for them to take up (these) and (they’re) not as versatile as their foreign colleagues, in terms of being very open to being relocated or just to travel,” she added.

    Overall, the number of complaints about discriminatory hiring practices received by TAFEP last year fell sharply, compared to 2013 when there were 475 complaints. But the 2013 figure was considered a blip, as it was the year when the Fair Consideration Framework was introduced. The framework requires employers to consider Singaporeans first for job openings. In 2012, there were 303 cases.

    Apart from alleged discrimination based on nationality, one in five complaints wre biased linked to age — a similar proportion to alleged discrimination related to language or race.

    On the number of complaints from the banking and IT sectors, Mrs Ten felt this was because “people in these sectors are more vocal”.

    “They’re the PMEs (professionals, managers and executives), so they know where to bring their complaints to. It’s because of people’s awareness, rather than because these sectors are more discriminative of the Singaporeans,” she said.

    Reiterating that many unfair employment practices were largely due to miscommunication, she said clear-cut cases of discrimination against Singaporeans are rare. “It’s really more of … perception,” she said.

    In cases where companies do not adhere to fair employment practices, TAFEP offers suggestions to boost their human resource (HR) systems, such as refining job application forms or training recruiters in interviewing techniques.

    It also educates companies on a sectorial level — through union talks, seminars and campaigns. As part of its outreach efforts, it organises a conference for business leaders, HR practitioners and academics every two years. This year’s conference takes place on Thursday.

    Mrs Ten said TAFEP will step up efforts in promoting work-life harmony and the hiring of older workers, through sharing case studies and commissioning more studies.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Zulfikar Shariff: Lee Kuan Yew’s Legacy On Islam And Discrimination Of Malays Should Not Be allowed To Perpetuate

    Zulfikar Shariff: Lee Kuan Yew’s Legacy On Islam And Discrimination Of Malays Should Not Be allowed To Perpetuate

    Alhamdulillah, most of my friends are those who have not been indoctrinated.

    There are Muslims who have good intentions but lack political understanding. They assume that with his death, LKY does not have any further effect on Muslims. We should then move forward and not discuss him anymore.

    But that is the problem when someone lack appreciation of political narratives and try to make a claim on political effects. Let me make this simple to understand. An institution is made up of 3 primary components: routines, expected behaviour and shared goals. The government is an institution through the existence of the 3 characteristics.

    The shared goals (or shared reality) is a set of ideas, values, philosophies that are developed through the institution. In the PAP and government, how Muslims are engaged and treated owes a lot to Lee Kuan Yew’s views of reducing Islam to its bare minimum

    His demands for rejection of various aspects of Islam were not adopted through any objective measure. Rather, they were granted legitimacy simply through the force of his demands.

    Ideas do not die with the death of its advocates. They live on. The way Lee Kuan Yew discriminates the Muslims, lives beyond his natural life.

    Thus, the only way to challenge the ideas and halt its promotion is to challenge the narrative surrounding Lee Kuan Yew. Delegitimise his interaction and management of the community and his ideas of how the Muslims should be discriminated (while pretending to support) loses currency.

    So for those who want to keep quiet and accept his legacy, that is your right. Do that. Those who want to promote him as the spirit of Singapore’s development, you can do that too.

    The rest of us will tear down the fiction of Lee Kuan Yew’s history. Not because we want to discuss the man.

    But because his ideas on how the community should be discriminated and how Islam should be rejected cannot be allowed to live on.

     

    Source: Zulfikar Shariff

  • Former Malay Employee Of FMSS Alleged Discrimination By Malaysian-Chinese Bosses

    Former Malay Employee Of FMSS Alleged Discrimination By Malaysian-Chinese Bosses

    Salam admin Rilek1Corner …

    I worked for worker party management agent FMSS before. I help out with admin work but I cannot stay long there.

    Tak bleh tahan people there …

    I am not racist. I got many good friends who are Chinese. Singapore is multiracial and different race must respect one another.

    But I was unhappy when I working with FMSS. They discrminate us Malays because the senior people there and the supervisors there are all Malaysian Chinese…

    my collicks who are Singaporeans also cannot tahan the Malaysians inside there…and many quit. We kena bossed around and they always raise their voice on us show no respect. . there was singapore versus malaysia mindset..not healthy. The malaysia people only hang out and lunch by themselves and never join us Singaporeans..

    Not only fmss managment side with Malaysians chinese working there…FMSS is also racist cos they treated Malay staff differently … i got to know this because i doing same work as my chinese collick (i repeat here that I am not racist..), and i more experienced and i guided her as her mentor… but her salary was $200 dollar more …

    this is not fair. i am not the only Malay staff with same experience…got lower pay compared to peers doing same job …

    i told my friends about my encounter inside fmss but they told me to tahan abit more because this is a job. some friends dont belief me because WP outside appear very good fight for singaporeans. but people dont know Faisal manap got no authority inside fmss to help us Malays because he not involved in town council work… the person who hold power inside fmss is sylvia lim like the chinese empress dowager..the FMSS management respect her and very scared of her…

    i already quit from FMSS…stop my suffering…they same as pap…very money minded…

    there’s a malay saying, gajah sama berjuang, pelanduk mati ditengah-tengah…what to do…just my luck

    Nurul - FMSS Comment

    nurul

  • Discriminatory Sheng Shiong Job Advertisement Causes Stir

    Discriminatory Sheng Shiong Job Advertisement Causes Stir

    Dear The Real Singapore,

    I came across this job ad from Sheng Shiong: http://jobs.jobstreet.com/sg/jobs/4399626?fr=23

    They are looking for a management trainee to assume the position of a buyer. In this position, it said: “You will learn the ways of sourcing, merchandising, advertising, inventory management, book-keeping and human resource…”

    Why should the job applicant need to speak and write in both English and Mandarin?

    It said this is to facilitate the liaising with “Mandarin speaking associates”.

    Sheng Shiong Advert 1

    But take a look at the requirements for this job:

    Sheng Shiong Advert 2

    Who are these “associates” Sheng Siong is referring to?

    The position is for a buyer. If you are talking about the need to communicate with suppliers, don’t all Singapore suppliers speak English or Singlish? If it’s a foreign-owned supplier in Singapore, doesn’t the company need to hire Singaporeans too?

    Unless you are telling me that you are sourcing all your supplies from China and you deal only with PRC suppliers from China, I can’t see why this position requires the candidate to be able to speak and write in Mandarin too.

    Next, is Sheng Siong also referring the “associates” to colleagues working inside Sheng Siong?

    I know that there are many PRCs working inside Sheng Siong. Is Sheng Siong saying that the candidate needs to know Mandarin so as to be able to communicate with the PRC staff inside Sheng Siong? If this is the reason, then I think the argument for the need of Mandarin speaking candidates is even worse! In the first place, shouldn’t Sheng Siong be recruiting “foreign talents” who can speak English? What kind of talents are Sheng Siong recruiting? Do tell us.

    Unless Sheng Siong can come up with a damn good justification, this job ad is clearly discriminatory!

    Sheng Siong, please don’t behave like PAP and think that Singaporeans are stupid these days, thinking that Singaporeans can believe in all kinds of crap reasons thrown at us.

    We wait for your explanation on the matter.

    Thank you.

    Tipper

     

    Source: www.therealsingapore.com

  • Frozen Yogurt Chain Llaollao To Be Investigated By Tripartite Aliance For Fair And Progressive Employment Practice

    Frozen Yogurt Chain Llaollao To Be Investigated By Tripartite Aliance For Fair And Progressive Employment Practice

    Frozen yogurt chain Llaollao has apologised to a local Punjabi woman who was reportedly turned away from a part-time position at an outlet because she could not speak Mandarin.

    The Tripartite Alliance for Fair and Progressive Employment Practices (TAFEP) is also investigating the incident for possibly violating employment guidelines, reported TODAY.

    Karish Kaur related the experience via her Facebook page on 7 January, explaining how she was turned away during a walk-in interview at West Mall’s outlet after telling a manager she did not speak Mandarin.

    “Why is it that the onus is now on me to learn a whole new language just so I am able to attain a part-time job at an F&B outlet?” she wrote. “Are we not taking into account the fact that this is a multiracial country and that (surprise surprise) there are people who do not speak Chinese?”

    Llaollao posted an apology on its Facebook page on January 13, saying it was “deeply sorry for the insensitivity shown”.

    Llaollao’s country manager Edwin Ferroa also personally apologised to Karish in an email on 11 January, adding that the West Mall franchisee will stop walk-in interviews for the time being in order to give staff more adequate training “to treat potential employees better”.

    After conducting its own investigations, Llaollao told TODAY that the person who turned Karish away was not an employee, but a wife of one of the franchise owners. Llaollao’s management has since warned all franchisees not to allow unauthorised people into their kitchens.

     

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com