Malaysian firms accused of exploiting Bangladeshi workers in wage dispute

Published: 8:17pm, 10 Nov 2025Updated: 8:39pm, 10 Nov 2025

About 100 Bangladeshi workers who were employed by Malaysian companies rallied on Monday to demand unpaid wages, fair compensation and an end to alleged abuse by Malaysian employers.

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The Migrant Welfare Network, a Bangladeshi migrant group based in Malaysia and Bangladesh, organised the protest at the Ministry of Expatriates’ Welfare and Overseas Employment in Bangladesh’s capital, Dhaka.

The demonstrators said the event was organised to protest what they say is widespread mistreatment of migrant workers in Malaysia, one of Southeast Asia’s richest nations. They demanded unpaid wages and compensation for 431 Bangladeshi workers they said were exploited by two Malaysian companies, Mediceram and Kawaguchi Manufacturing.

The companies could not be immediately reached for comment.

Many factories in Malaysia and other Southeast Asian countries rely on migrant workers, often from Bangladesh, Myanmar and Nepal, to fill labour-intensive jobs in manufacturing, plantations or construction. Local workers usually avoid such jobs because of their poor conditions and low wages.

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The Migrant Welfare Network urged Bangladeshi and Malaysian authorities and international buyers to take immediate action to ensure workers receive wages already owed, fair compensation and “justice for systemic abuses”.

Foreign workers from Bangladesh are arrested by the Malaysia Immigration Department during a raid in Kuala Lumpur in 2020. Photo: Shutterstock
Foreign workers from Bangladesh are arrested by the Malaysia Immigration Department during a raid in Kuala Lumpur in 2020. Photo: Shutterstock

  

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