Bangladeshi workers protest in Malaysia over unpaid wages and mistreatment claims – Winnipeg Free Press

DHAKA, Bangladesh (AP) — About 100 Bangladeshi workers employed by Malaysian companies gathered Monday to demand unpaid wages, fair compensation and an end to alleged abuses by Malaysian employers.

The Migrant Welfare Network, a group of Bangladeshi migrants based in Malaysia and Bangladesh, organized the protest outside the Ministry of Expatriate Welfare and Overseas Employment in the Bangladeshi capital Dhaka.

Demonstrators said the event was organized to protest widespread mistreatment of migrant workers in Malaysia, one of Southeast Asia's richest countries. They demanded unpaid wages and compensation for 431 Bangladeshi workers who they said were exploited by two Malaysian companies, Mediceram and Kawaguchi Manufacturing.



Bangladeshi workers employed by Malaysian companies protest in front of the Ministry of Expatriate Welfare and Overseas Employment, demanding unpaid wages, fair compensation and an end to alleged abuses by Malaysian employers, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Monday, November 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Mahmud Hossain Opu)

The Associated Press could not immediately reach the companies for comment.

Many factories in Malaysia and other Southeast Asian countries rely on migrant workers, often from Bangladesh, Myanmar and Nepal, to fill labor-intensive jobs in manufacturing, plantations or construction. Local workers generally avoid such work due to poor working conditions and low wages.

The Migrant Welfare Network called on authorities in Bangladesh and Malaysia, as well as international buyers, to take immediate action to ensure workers receive wages already owed, fair compensation and “justice for systemic abuses.”

The group said in a statement Monday that a complaint of forced labor and neglect was filed by the Malaysian government against Australian company Ansell, a major Mediceram client that makes gloves for medical, industrial and household use.

A separate complaint was filed against Kawaguchi, which supplied plastic components to major Japanese companies, including Sony Group.

In May, about 280 Bangladeshi migrant workers from Kawaguchi demanded hundreds of thousands of dollars in back wages and other money owed to them after the company closed five months earlier.