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HCMC seeks stricter measures against illegal foreign workers
Tuesday, 27 October 2009
The Ho Chi Minh City administration will
ask the government to increase fines imposed on firms that employ illegal
workers by ten times.
Le Hoang Quan, chairman of the city’s People’s Committee, said the
fines against employers found using illegal workers, currently between VND5
million (US$280) and VND10 million ($560), were too low to act as a deterrent.
The city will suggest fines of VND50-100 million instead, he
said at a meeting held on Friday to discuss the rising number of violations
related to hiring foreign workers.
A total of 16,800 foreigners are currently working in the
city and nearly 3,000 don’t have labor permits, the city’s Department of Labor,
Invalids, and Social Affairs estimated. Most of them are employed in footwear
and textiles and garment companies.
But Le Xuan Vien, deputy head of Vietnam’s Immigration Management
Bureau under the Ministry of Public Security, said the real number may be
higher.
“A recent inspection by the ministry of seven companies in
the city showed three quarters of 1,338 foreign workers don’t have labor
permits,” he said.
Nguyen Van Xe, deputy director of the city’s Department of
Labor, Invalids and Social Affairs, said many companies began using foreign
workers before asking for labor permits while many others did not report to the
authorities that they were employing foreign workers.
Nguyen Van Anh, head of the city’s Immigration Management
Department, said many unskilled Africans have entered the country as tourists
and stayed on to work temporarily for businesses in the city.
Some of them have asked Vietnamese people to seek investment
certificates for opening restaurants, hotels, and karaoke parlours, he said.
Vien said foreign workers without permits could be expelled
from the country.
He said companies that had employed foreigners for three
months in Vietnam
without work permits would get three more months to get them. After that,
foreigners without work permits will be asked to leave, he added.
Quach To Dung, deputy director of the city’s Department of
Industry and Trade, said her agency had revoked 400 of 2,398 foreign companies’
operation licenses due to different labor law violations this year.
But as no fines have been imposed on such cases, most of then
have yet to close down, she said.
In the first nine months of this year, the HCMC police
registered 52 crimes involving 127 foreigners.
Of them, 16 were involved in drug trafficking, 16 others in
swindling and 12 in robberies. Most of the violators were from Nigeria, Turkey
and some Asian countries like Iran,
Korea, the Philippines and India, city police said.