Foreign governments told to respect Malaysia's action on illegal immigrants

13 Jul 2017 / 11:39 H.

KUALA LUMPUR: Foreign governments must respect Malaysia's effort to detain and repatriate illegals under the nationwide operation code named E-Card Mega Op said Malaysian Crime Prevention Foundation (MCPF) senior vice-chairman Tan Sri Lee Lam Thye.
In a statement here today, he said the Immigration Department had given given a long grace period, from Feb 15 to June 30, for employers and illegals to take part in the Enforcement Card (E-Card) programme.
"Scores of reminders were given via numerous media channels and no excuses are acceptable if the employers failed to do so," he said.
The Indonesian government recently also urged the Malaysian government to stop the operation and extend the process of registering illegals.
However, Immigration Department of Malaysia director-general Datuk Seri Mustafar Ali prior to this had stressed that the government would not extend the programme.
The E-Card programme, which was launched nationwide, enables illegals to obtain legitimate work permits after undergoing several procedures stipulated by the Home Ministry.
Lee said the Malaysian government had never prevented foreign workers from seeking permissible employment in this country but employers must be responsible and abide by the stipulated laws and regulations
"It was reported that only 23% or 161,056 illegals were registered involving 28,375 employers with 145,571 E-Card issued since the application for E-Card started on Feb 15," he said.
Lee added that he hoped that the Immigration Department of Malaysia would take stringent action under the Immigration Act 1959/63 against employers found to have employed and sheltering illegals, and in cahoots with and allowing illegals to stay on their premises.
Until 10.30 am Tuesday (July 11) 3,116 illegals and 63 employers were detained under the E-Card Mega Op nationwide. — Bernama

sentifi.com

thesundaily_my Sentifi Top 10 talked about stocks