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Oldest migrant support group calls for ‘just pay’ for FDWs

30 September 2023

 

The Mission 's booth at St John's where people were invited to write letters of thanks to migrants

Migrant domestic workers should be justly compensated.

This was the reaction issued today, Sept. 30, by the Mission for Migrant Workers to yesterday’s announcement by the Hong Kong government that the minimum allowable wage for foreign domestic workers will be raised by a mere $140, to $4870.

The church-based non-government organization that has served migrant workers in Hong Kong for nearly five decades said the “small” 3 percent increase in FDW wages are “not gifts that they should grovel in gratitude.”

PINDUTIN PARA SA DETALYE

It went on to quote St Paul in Romans 4:4 – “to the one who works, his wages are not counted as a gift but as his due.” 

For the past 10 years, FDW salary adjustments traditionally announced in September has risen “a meager $810 over the past decade from 2012 to 2022,” said the Mission.

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It added that FDWs contribute to the progress of Hong Kong by freeing employers from household chores and attain gainful employment, so it is just right for them to be paid well.

“Migrant domestic workers, and all workers for that matter, deserve respect for dignity and decent income,” said the Mission.

PINDUTIN PARA SA DETALYE

“One need not be a Christian to feel for the dignity of workers, including foreign domestic workers,” it added.

The support group also questioned how the government arrives at the amount of wages that is due FDWs, saying the process “remains a mystery.”

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Meanwhile, the Mission joined the Sunday outreach of St. John’s Cathedral on Sept. 24. The NGO’s representatives led by its general manager Cynthia Tellez, shared their work in the church services and gave an overview of the domestic workers’ life in Hong Kong.

The Mission said that as the longest existing migrant service provider in Hong Kong and Asia, it handles 150 to 200 new cases monthly, of which 70% are labour and employment-related problems.

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As part of its service, the NGO has supported workers abandoned by their employers during the Covid pandemic, sheltered those fired and not taken for treatment after getting sick, supported those scammed by rogue agencies, and we assisted the family of a worker who fell to her death while cleaning windows at her employer’s flat.

As part of its advocacy of creating harmonious relations between migrants and the community, the Mission set up a booth with the theme “Give Thanks, Give Care” and invited people to write down “words of appreciation” to the migrant worker community.

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