Tag: maids

  • No Non-Muslim Maids For Malaysian Muslims

    No Non-Muslim Maids For Malaysian Muslims

    PETALING JAYA: Maid agencies are stunned by a “new” directive im­posed by the Immigration De­­part­­ment barring them from hiring non-Muslim maids.

    Employers have questioned the rationale behind the policy, which department officials said was not new, as they were worried that they may not get any maids at all.

    Malaysian Maid Employers Asso­ciation (MAMA) president Engku Ahmad Fauzi said the policy would limit the supply of maids for Muslims.

    “Religion should not be an obstacle. When you work in an office, you don’t base it on religion and likewise, this should not be the case for the maid in the home,” he said yesterday.

    He called on the Immigration Department to enlighten people on the rationale of the policy.

    A maid agency owner in Selangor who did not want to be named said she had applied for non-Muslim maids for Muslims who wanted them through the Foreign Workers Centralised Management System online but they were rejected.

    “When I called, I was told to go to the counter to submit the application. But at the counter, the officers said that the policy was a directive from the director-general,” she said.

    The officers said the policy had always existed and if she still wanted to put in the application, they would reject it, she said.

    “If they did not allow Muslims to hire non-Muslims from the beginning, why did they allow it earlier?

    “There was no circular to inform us about this,” she said, adding that the rejection had been ongoing for two weeks.

    She said that if Muslim countries such as Saudi Arabia and Qatar could hire non-Muslims, why not Malaysia?

    Another maid agency owner based in Kuala Lumpur said Malaysia had the policy all along, but some directors-general had allowed some flexibility depending on the situation.

    “The policy narrows down the opportunity for Muslims to get maids,” she said.

    Faiz Abdullah, 42, a father of three who lives in Petaling Jaya said he had heard from his maid agency about the matter.

    He said that he would need to renew his maid’s permit this month and was worried that it would be rejected.

    He said it was not easy to get a good and reliable maid these days and asked why it should be based on religion and race.

    Business owner Zubir Rahman, 46, a father of three from Shah Alam said he was concerned about the policy because he preferred Filipino maids as they were more reliable.

    He said he had three Indonesian maids before and two ran away but all four Filipino maids fulfilled their contracts.

    “It would pose a problem for me because to get a good maid these days is very difficult,” said Zubir, whose current maid’s contract would expire in December.

     

    Source: www.bharian.com.my

  • Indonesian Maid Arrested For Murdering Employer In Telok Kurau

    Indonesian Maid Arrested For Murdering Employer In Telok Kurau

    Three men on motorbikes were riding past a semi-detached house in Telok Kurau last night when they heard shouts for help.

    They parked their motorbikes in front of the house and saw a man struggling with a woman in the front porch.

    The gate was open and the man told them to grab hold of the woman. Two of them went to help him while the third called the police.

    One of them, a mechanic, told The New Paper in Mandarin: “I held on to the woman, who kept struggling and was bleeding from her hands.

    “I held her hands and got blood all over myself. The man was also covered in blood”

    His friend, who works in construction, added: “Of course, we were scared. Whoever saw what was happening would have been scared.”

    He then ran into the house to get a cloth to wipe the man’s wound, which was around the throat area.

    The three men, who are Malaysians in their 20s, had stumbled on the scene of a murder while heading to dinner after work.

    The house owner later told them the woman is his maid who had just killed his wife.

    When the police showed up about five minutes later, they went to a friend’s place nearby to wash off the blood on their hands and clothes before going for dinner.

    The men, who declined to be identified, returned to the scene around midnight to see what was happening.

    One of them said: “I would not call ourselves brave for helping.

    “We just saw that the uncle needed help and he looked really scared.”

    TNP understands that the house owner, 57, was on the first level of his three-storey house when he heard a commotion on the second storey.

    He went up to check and heard noises in the bathroom. When he opened the door, he was shocked to see his maid step out with a bloodied knife.

    He immediately tried to disarm her and was injured during the struggle while his daughter-in-law called the police for help.

    The police said they were alerted to the incident at 50C, Lorong H, off Telok Kurau Road, at 8.48pm.

    A spokesman said the injured man was later taken in an ambulance to Changi General Hospital (CGH). His condition could not be confirmed.

    His wife, 59, was found lying motionless in the bathroom and pronounced dead by paramedics at 9.03pm.

    He added that a 23-year-old woman was arrested in relation to the case, which has been classified as murder.

    Investigations are ongoing.

    TNP understands that the maid, believed to be an Indonesian, had attacked the woman in the bathroom.

    Her motive for the attack was not known by press time.

    CROWD

    A nearby resident told TNP that he saw a crowd of people milling outside one of his neighbours’ home.

    From the outside, he could see the house owner with blood on his chest.

    “The maid was sitting on a bench with her hands bandaged. There were blood stains on her legs,” said the neighbour who declined to be identified.

    “I think she had also sustained head wounds because I saw a policewoman cleaning her head and there was blood on the cloth.”

    The owner was then wheeled on a stretcher to an ambulance.

    “Before he got into the ambulance, he told the daughter-in-law to arrange for both their maids to be sent home,” he said.

    The injured maid was taken away in another ambulance, he added.

    “One of his sons later came out of the house and sat at the front porch. Then rain fell and most of the crowd dispersed.”

    A neighbour in her 50s, who wanted to be known only as Ms Wang, said that she usually saw the owner gardening.

    She heard from her sister that he spent a lot of time tending to the vegetables in the grass patch outside his house and did business in China.

    The Singapore Civil Defence Force said it sent two ambulances to the scene after receiving a call at 8.47pm.

    A spokesman said a woman in her 20s was taken to CGH with an injury on the left side of the head and lacerations on both hands.

    A man who was in the crowd identified himself as an employee of the house owner’s son, who owns a fish farm in Johor Baru, and that his father owns a construction company.

    He said he had gone to the house after his employer called him to say that something had happened to his mother.

    A group of six to seven men had also gathered at a bus stop about 50m from the house. One of them was sobbing while gesticulating as two friends tried to console him.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • 5 Reasons Why Singaporeans May Not Like The Idea Of Live-Out Maids

    5 Reasons Why Singaporeans May Not Like The Idea Of Live-Out Maids

    This article was originally on GET.com at: 5 Reasons Why Singaporeans May Not Like The Idea Of Live-Out Maids

    We’re all so accustomed to the idea of having our domestic maids live under the same roof as us, aren’t we? I don’t know how feasible it would be if the Indonesian authorities got their way with wanting maids to stop being live-ins, and how it’ll ultimately affect Singaporeans who pay good money to employ helpers to ease their domestic burdens. According to this piece of fresh news, Singaporeans who employ maids are antsy about Indonesia’s recent declaration to have Indonesian maids live separately from their employers – a complete contradiction of the Employment of Foreign Manpower Act that illustrates that ‘foreign domestic workers must live with their employers at the addresses stated on their work permits’.

    Indonesian authorities put forth that this move is supposed to protect the Indonesian domestic workers’ welfare and in exchange, they’ll seek to formalise these helpers’ training so that they’ll be better trained in areas like cooking, eldercare and childcare. Well, we at GET.com will share with you 5 reasons why Singaporeans may not be keen on the idea of live-out maids.

    5 Reasons Why Singaporeans May Not Like The Idea Of Live-Out Maids

    1. Heightened Inconvenience For Both Employers And Helpers

    People hire domestic helpers to help take a burden off their shoulders whether it be cooking, cleaning or taking care of the young and old at home. When the domestic helpers whom we hire can’t be there when we need them especially in times of emergencies at home, who are we supposed to turn to?

    From the helpers’ perspectives, I would imagine it to be a lot more troublesome for them since they’ll have to travel to and fro wherever they’ll be living at to their workplace. The time wasted on commuting could have been spent catching up on sleep or exercising as a matter of fact.

    Plus, we don’t know when the public transportation system is going to break down or cause delays, do we?

    2. Some Employers Treat Their Helpers As Family

    Extending from the point above, some employers genuinely care for their domestic helpers and treat them like their own blood-related family. I have a friend my age (24, that is) who’s grown up with the same helper since she was born. They have forged such a close, fulfilling relationship that some biological parent-child pairs would be secretly envious of.

    For such cases, helpers and employers may feel more at ease if they’re living under the same roof so that both parties can look out for each other.

    3. The Cost Of Hiring Indonesian Helpers May Creep Up

    Will Singaporean employers have to shoulder these new Indonesian maids’ lodging, daily commuting and meal costs if their helpers do not live with them?

    If the answer is yes, would it be more cost effective for Singaporeans to hire local hourly helpers instead or maids from other neighbouring countries like Myanmar and the Philippines? That’s for us to find out in due time, so take heart that we have options.

    4. Increased Strain On Our Public Transport System

    According to the news, there are approximately 125,000 Indonesian maids employed in Singapore currently.

    Though this new initiative in discussion applies for only new Indonesian domestic helpers looking to work here in Singapore, we do not know exactly how many much more will our public transport system be strained to have a sizeable number of people squeezing with us on already jam-packed trains and buses.

    Similar to what we’ve recently shared about our two cents’ worth on car-lite Singapore, having domestic helpers squeeze with the rest of the working population during peak hours isn’t going to help improve our quality of life at all. Neither will it improve theirs if they have to go to work via the same platforms as us commoners.

    5. Live-Out Maids Have Higher Chances Of Being Led Astray

    If they were to live elsewhere, who knows what they’ll be up to after work hours, if they’ll mix with bad company and whether they will put their own livelihood and lives at risk by moonlighting or getting pregnant?

    I’m sure time-strapped employers wouldn’t want to be kept on their toes all the time, needing to put in the extra time and effort to ensure that their helpers remain dutiful and responsible.

    The Notion Of Singaporean Employers Being The Bully Is An Unfair Generalisation

    As well-intentioned as the Indonesian authorities’ concerns may be, not all employers are errant, demeaning or nasty.

    Besides, there have been plenty of cases where Indonesian maids have abused or even killed their employers or their employers’ elderly parents or little ones. It is certainly unfair to just make sweeping statements that slap Singaporean employers with such accusations in general.

    Also, everybody would have worked overtime at some point in their working life, it’s just part and parcel of work. Not everyone, Singaporeans included, get compensation for all those extra hours slogged.

     

    Source: https://sg.finance.yahoo.com

     

  • My Maid Cooked My Koi!

    My Maid Cooked My Koi!

    Dear editor

    Just to share a funny incident

    We hired a domestic worker from Indonesia recently because we hope she can help us look after our kids and my parents. My wife also needs a little help with housework as she was promoted recently.

    Our new helper is polite, diligent and willing to learn. She even has good rapport with our pet dog and take effort to prepare food for it. We guess we are lucky because we have heard tales about maids from hell. She can cook quite well, although not as good as my wife la… but hey, she is willing to learn.

    However, on Sunday when I was scrubbing my fish pond, I felt something was amiss about the pond but I was not able to pinpoint what went wrong. I ignored the feeling and went on with my daily routine.

    During lunch, I decided to peek at what was cooking – And I saw a weird looking steamed fish in my wok. Then I realised my maid has cooked my Koi fish! I immediately went into my yard and counted the number of Koi fishes. It was short of one!

    I asked my maid abouthe Koi fish. She seems a little puzzled. She said it is not uncommon for people in her hometown to eat Koi fishes. Apparantly, she steamed the Koi fish with other dishes for our pet dog.

    I have attached the photo of my poor fish. Anyway, we forgave her la. haha. It was quite funny.

    Lim

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • Stop Allowing Maids To Be Preyed Upon By Sexual Predators

    Stop Allowing Maids To Be Preyed Upon By Sexual Predators

    I am filing this report as my concern to what is happening every Sunday at our parks and public places. I hope the authorities and the public will look into this issues.

    Every Sunday, Paya Lebar and Lucky Plaza have become a ‘flesh market’ for thousands of Banglas to gather, stalk, prey and pick maids for their lust and sexual desires.

    Also check-out every Sunday at the East Coast Park, Carpark D, Banglas and maids pitch tents for their ‘sex love nests’ for their immoral activities. Right in a public recreational park and beach areas that are meant for family outings. I am sure making love in a public area is a punishable offence.

    The open space between Kallang Airport Drive and Kallang Airport Way is littered with couples, Banglas and maids. Openly displaying ‘intimate and sensuous’ behaviours.

    This are not a normal boy/girl relationships of love and marriage, these are clear cut issues of sex predators taking advantage of naïve, vulnerable maids for their sexual pleasures. As we know the Banglas/Indians come from a country where women are subservient to men, a male chauvinistic society, a rape occurs every 15 minutes.

    Our maids have become the weekend ‘comfort women’ for these Bangla sex predators. Both Banglas and maids have it free and easy for sexual misconduct in Singapore.

    As we know hundreds of maids are pregnant every year, as always the girls get used and abandon.

    Sexual offences goes unreported.The maids do not how to complain and address their problems, They are easily exploited. On numerous occasions I have heard of maids after booking a hotel room with their Bangla boyfriends, find their money and possession missing along with their boyfriends. I also heard cases of sexual offences, forced sex, spiked drinks and broken promises

    When molest and rapes do happen, most maids are too scared to report , whatever happens these girls will never ever report to the authorities or police let alone inform their employers. They are the silent victims.

    There are more sinister intentions besides a normal Bangla and maid relationship. Willing or unwilling the line must not be crossed, all this must be within the boundaries of Singapore laws. I believe these foreign workers have contravene and defy their working contract which requires good behavior and not to cause public unease. These foreign workers have displayed bahaviours that have been very disconcerting and caused unease and disgust among Singaporeans.

    Action must be taken to apprehend these sex predators, curtailed such abuses and protect our maids.

    After taking care of liquors and drinkers, its time to reprimand and discipline Banglas/Indians sexpredators of stalking, preying and sexploiting our maids.

    My suggestions,
    • Every Sundays, the authorities, Police and MOM must check-out and record Banglas/Indians and maids booking into cheap hourly rates hotels, eg Hotel 81,involving in “illicit, inappropriate and unacceptable sexual relationship”.
    • The National Parks authority must keep track of park users and camp sites not for sinister activities.
    • Bangla/Indian drivers must not use their employers vans, on Sundays for making love. ( recently I saw a van with mattress, maids in East Coast Park)
    • Banglas and maids who display ‘flirtatious and indecent behavior’ in public.
    • In Sentosa, Banglas/Indians taking photos or oggling at bikini swimmers must be apprehended.
    This is a problem that needs to be addressed by the authorities. If nothing is done, then this will continue to happen indefinitely, Banglas will become more bolder and more innocent maids will fall victims indefinitely.

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com