Penang, Malaysia (BBN)-Malaysian police rescued twenty seven Bangladeshi in Penang state on with no work permits and they only have photostated copies of their passport on Tuesday.
A group of foreigners paid RM15,000 each to work here but all are jobless and starving, reports the Malaysian-based online portal The Star Online.
The 27 Bangladeshis were only getting a daily meal of water and roti canai and a cold hard floor to sleep on.
They arrived in the country through the Kuala Lumpur International Airport (KLIA) on February 2 and their agent took them to Shah Alam but the group was rejected by the factory because of immigration issues.
They were then transported to Johor Baru where they were again rejected.
On Monday they arrived in Penang and police were tipped off.
All of them, together with three locals believed to members of a human trafficking syndicate, are now in detention.
Penang police chief Comm Datuk Abdul Ghafar Rajab said 17 of the foreigners were found when police stormed a two-storey industrial building in Taman Desa Murni.
“They were very weak as they were only fed with water and roti canai. The cement floor was their bed.
“After the Malaysian suspects were questioned, we found another 10 Bangladeshis in a workshop in Bagan Lalang, Butterworth, who we believe were sold to a factory,” he said.
“All 27 of them do not have work permits and they only had photostated copies of their passport.
“All were men aged between 20 and 40.
“We staked out the building in Taman Desa Murni after receiving the tip off and at 11:00am on Tuesday, we raided it,” Comm Abdul Ghafar told a press conference yesterday.
The three locals, aged between 30 and 60, were remanded yesterday for 28 days to facilitate investigations.
“We are now looking for a fourth suspect to assist in investigations,” he said.
The case has been classified under Section 26(H)of the Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act for concealing or harbouring smuggled migrants and migrant smugglers and Section 6(1)(c) of the Immigration Act 1959/63.
BBN/SK/AD