Don't allow workers to become 'sitting ducks' MTUC

Bernama
June 16, 2020 16:05 MYT
Solomon said the MTUC will push for the government to introduce the Emergency Employment Regulations to prohibit employers from laying off workers for a specific period. - FILEpic
In light of employers ramp up warnings of a double-digit hike in unemployment in the coming months, the Malaysian Trades Union Congress (MTUC) urged the government to not allow local and foreign workers in the country to become 'sitting ducks'.
Its secretary-general J. Solomon said the government should do all they can to protect the livelihood of employees, as most of them are from the B40 hardcore poor who are already struggling to sustain themselves and their families.
"The Ministry of Human Resources (MOHR) must convene an urgent meeting of the National Labour Advisory Council (NLAC) to plug the ongoing retrenchments taking place and prevent the many more that are in the pipeline as the MEF (Malaysian Employers Federation) has warned.
"The government clearly needs to think out of the box and formulate new approaches to ensure workers retain their jobs," he said in a statement today.
However, he said the MTUC remains convinced of the government had noble objectives in introducing various forms of assistance to help workers retain their jobs as the country attempts to kick start the economy.
Meanwhile, Solomon said the MTUC will push for the government to introduce the Emergency Employment Regulations to prohibit employers from laying off workers for a specific period.
"Although many employers have balked at this proposal, it should be discussed at the NLAC to give us the chance to defend it with sound reasons," he said.
According to him, the MEF yesterday warned that the five per cent unemployment rate in the country, by far the worst in 30 years, would go up as high as 12 per cent before the middle of next year.
"We urge the MOHR and the government in general not to make light or trivialise MEF warnings of unemployment hitting 12 per cent in the coming months by saying it has the necessary mechanisms in place to deal with.
"In the absence of further government intervention, workers especially lowly paid ones face the real risk of losing their jobs if they have not already. We urge the government not to let them become easy pickings for employers obsessed with their bottom line," he said.
-- BERNAMA
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