Sunday, February 18, 2024

Immigration Dept raids illegal settlement in Setia Alam, arrests 132 undocumented migrants




Immigration Dept raids illegal settlement in Setia Alam, arrests 132 undocumented migrants




The Immigration Department arrested 132 undocumented migrants, in an operation in an illegal settlement in an oil palm plantation area in Setia Alam, near here, early this morning. — Bernama pic

Sunday, 18 Feb 2024 9:02 AM MYT



SHAH ALAM, Feb 18 — The Immigration Department arrested 132 undocumented migrants, in an operation in an illegal settlement in an oil palm plantation area in Setia Alam, near here, early this morning.

Immigration deputy director-general (Operations), Jafri Embok Taha, said that 130 Indonesians, including 76 men, 41 women and 13 children (one of whom is a nine-month-old baby), as well as two Bangladeshi men, were arrested in the operation, which started at 2.38am.


He said that the results of intelligence and complaints received by the department found that the settlement had existed for the past four years, and was equipped with electricity.

“These foreigners are believed to be renting the area from local residents, who also supply electricity. The ‘Ketua Kampung’ (village chief) here claimed they shared paying about RM6,000 a month for the rental of 0.6 hectare of land.


“In this illegal settlement, there are also sundry shops, food stalls and surau. Most of these foreigners work as cleaners, restaurant assistants and construction workers in the surrounding area,” he said, after the enforcement operation today.


He said that, based on checks, all the foreigners involved did not have valid travel documents and had stayed in the country for far too long.

“During the three-hour operation, there were those who climbed on the roof, and locked themselves (in the house) so as not to be arrested by the authorities.

Jafri said that the operation involved 220 members and officers from various agencies, including the General Operations Force (GOF) and the National Registration Department, and the case was investigated under the Immigration Act 1959/63.

Asked about action against the landowner, he replied that further review would be carried out under Section 55E (1) of the Immigration Act 1959/63.

He also reminded the public and employers not to harbour illegal immigrants, or face legal action. — Bernama

2 comments:

  1. The department should do more raids to weed out the overstayers from mainland China who number more than a million since several years ago. These are real troublemakers benefiting the evangelical Christian party.

    ReplyDelete
  2. There are estimated over 1,000,000 illegal undocumented immigrants in Malaysia.
    Calling then "undocumented"glossed over the fact that they entered and remain in the country illegally.

    ReplyDelete