Posts Tagged ‘Statistics’

Statistics on plantation workers

August 4th, 2008
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After the recent forced laborer case in his own constituency, Dr S.Subramaniam says that effective August 1, contractors and companies supplying workers to plantations must register with the Manpower Department. He said failure to do so will lead to legal action.

Dr Subramaniam said a study by the Manpower Department of 1,408 plantations recently revealed that 15,201 workers were contractored by 1,066 contractors and nine companies supplying workers.

Houses
– 49,565 workers’ houses of which 41,207 were built according to the Workers Minimum Standards of Housing and Amenities Act 1990 while the rest were “sub-standard” and needed improvement.

– ministry was also actively promoting a scheme whereby workers could eventually buy the houses they lived in.

Utilities
– On electricty and water suppply, 33,500 workers’ houses were supplied by public enterprises while the rest were supplied by sources maintained by their employers.

– large portion of plantations supplied electricity at commercial rates and that was not fair to the workers. To overcome the problem the Manpower Department met with TNB and the plantations and that TNB agreed to provide electricity to the houses via individual meters.

– the department was asked to talk to the relevant agencies to ensure water supplied was clean.

Conflicting data on government job application

August 2nd, 2008
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I was surprised to read that the number of applicants for between January and June this year was 797,973 while last year it was 760,840. Of this, the Chinese was 12,875 (12,111 in 2007), Indians 17,798 (18,553 in 2007), and others 101,085 (98,148 in 2007). Normal Malaysians application for the first six month of this year is 12,875 + 17,798 + 101,085 = 131,758, as compared to 128,812.

1. Note that the application from Indians actually DECREASED about 4% while the other groups
INCREASED 2.9% and 6.3%.

2. If normal Malaysians already account for 131,758 applications, that means privileged Malaysian account for (797,973 – 131,758) 666,215 applications. That’s a ratio of nearly 1 to 5.

According to Bernard Dompok, there are many vacancies for medical officers (doctors), administrative officers, Anti Drug Agency officers, and pharmacists.

All these numbers are look fine and dandy to me, until I saw statistics for period between July and December 2007 which was reported in May this year:

Tamil Nesan reported Sunday that about 47,253 non-Malays had applied
to join the civil service from July to December last year compared to
12,020 in the corresponding period the previous year.

Jamaluddin said that of the non-Malay applicants last year, 5,421
were Chinese (1,347 in 2006), 6,113 Indians (1,953), and 35,719 (8,720)
from other races.

When we compare those figures we find that in 2007, January-June applications were 128,812 while July-December was 47,253. The pay rise for government servants were announced in July last year. So, how can the number of applications after pay rise announcement reduced to nearly one third (47,253/128,812 is 36.68%) of the first six months before pay rise?

Need to check SPA site later. Its statistics page is down at the time of this posting.

Samy disagrees on community support for Tamil schools

July 26th, 2008
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MIBA president Sivakumar started the provocation by saying that:

If not for private donors and wealthy businessmen from the community, Sivakumar argues, half of the 523 Tamil schools in the country would have been closed down a long time ago. He cites a recent example where a hall for a Yahya Awal in Johor Baru, costing RM700,000, was built with public donations.

This made Samy Vellu quite unhappy obviously.

MIC president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu has challenged the claim that half the Tamil schools in the country would have closed down without the support of wealthy Indians.
He was reacting to Malaysian Indian Businessmen Association president P. Sivakumar’s claim that if not for private donations and wealthy businessmen, half of the 523 schools would have closed down a long time ago.

“The subject of Tamil schools is very dear to me because I was a Tamil school student. Since I became a minister in 1979, I started studying the position of Tamil schools. In 1981, I came out with the first programmes for educational empowerment of the Indian community. I asked JKR (Public Works Department) and my officers to study schools that needed attention.”

“I then approached then prime minister (Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad) in 1984 for RM5.5 million from the Prime Minster’s Fund. At that time there was scarce funds for partially-aided schools. He approved RM6 million and we built nine Tamil schools with the money.”

Later, Samy Vellu said, he approached then finance minister Tun Daim Zainuddin for funds and received RM4.5 million to build more schools. He said MIC was committed to continuously seek funds from the prime minister, education and finance ministers to keep on building Tamil schools to provide a better standard of education for Indian children.

“Recently, we secured a RM30 million grant and we have allocated RM11.3 million for building 10 schools in Selangor and 15 in the rest of the country, also costing RM11.3 million. Tenders are now being called. We have also obtained RM2 million for repairs of Tamil schools in Selangor this year while the government is building a RM1.2 million Tamil school in Kampung Lindungan on a 0.6ha site. The Education Ministry is also building 15 fully-aided Tamil schools costing RM11.5 million.”

From now until the end of next year, RM43.5 million has been committed for the upgrading and construction of Tamil schools, he said.

“For me, MIC is the guardian of Tamil schools and we have set up the MIED (Maju Institute of Educational Development), Yayasan Strategik Sosial to improve the lot of Indian children.”

He pointed out that it was through MIC initiatives that on July 1, the Cabinet Committee on Development of the Indian Community chaired by the deputy prime minister had agreed in principle that all Tamil schools should be converted to fully-aided schools.

I calculated RM98.7 million based on the numbers mentioned by Samy Vellu. Since 1984 till 2009 (26 years). That’s about RM3.796 million per year. Number of Tamil schools is 523.

inflation is at 7.7 percent

July 24th, 2008
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Our inflation rate used to be the lowest in the region if we used the official value of 2.8 percent. After the fuel price increase and its domino effect across the consumer sector, it was estimated that inflation will double to about 6%. Warning came in the form of May’s inflation which was 3.8% and some like Aseambankers expected it to be between 7.5 and 8 percent for the period July to December.

Today’s major headlines brought the bad news – 7.7 percent for June, and its expected to be the same in July due to increase in electricity tariff. This value is a 27-year high, since 1981’s 10.8 percent.

The substantial rise in the price of petrol and diesel announced by the
Government beginning June 5 is the main reason for the surge, said
Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Minister Datuk Shahrir Abdul Samad.

Other figures announced by the minister:

  • CPI for January to June this year had also increased by 3.7% compared
    with the same period last year, which was from 105.1 to 109.
  • Index for food and non-alcoholic beverages for June compared to the
    same month last year showed high percentage change of 10.0% while the
    index for non-food increased by 6.7%.
  • From January to June,
    index for food and non-alcoholic beverages increased by 6.1% and
    non-food 2.6%, while among the groups with high weights were transport
    (+4%), and housing, water, electricity, gas and other fuels (+ 1.4%).
  • The
    6.1% increase in the index for food and non-alcoholic beverages was the
    result of increases in the index for items such as milk, cheese, eggs,
    rice, bread, cereals, meat, vegetables, seafood, fruits, sugar, jam,
    honey, chocolate, confectionary and fats.
  • Among the food items
    that recorded notable increase in the June index were tomatoes, chicken
    eggs, rice, glutinous rice, imported beef, beehoon, dried noodles,
    watermelon, carrots, chicken and wheat flour.

Semenyih Estate workers plight

July 17th, 2008
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There was a interesting article in Star (Metro section) reproduced below on the plight of the Semenyih estate workers. There were some photos too. Thanks to Then for pointing out.

Few things I want to say:

1. Estate workers must think about owning a house and not be in comfort of living in quarters thinking its free for life. We can’t compare with Malay community who own lands. Thus estate workers have to put in triple or quadraple effort to own a house and provide education for children.

2. Some of the displaced workers, women especially, in Prang Besar and surrounding areas are now working as cleaners in Putrajaya. The maintenance companies hire these local people

3. I wonder who these people voted for, if they could vote.

BEFORE Putrajaya came into existence, there was the Prang Besar Estate.

While the country’s new federal administrative capital was still a design on the drawing board, hundreds of estate workers had toiled daily in Prang Besar. They tapped rubber and worked in the oil palm plantation, savouring the simple life as they knew it. The creation of Putrajaya opened a new chapter in the nation’s history but closed another. The dramatic change in the landscape from that of a rural estate to a modern city with towering structures best embodies the high price we pay for development.

It also acquainted us with the ugly term known as displacement.

According to statistics from the National Union of Plantation Workers (NUPW), the number of estates in Selangor dwindled from 150 in 1986 to 95 in 2006. Besides Putrajaya, former estates converted to mega development projects include Cyberjaya, the KL International Airport (KLIA), Bernam Valley and the Guthrie Corridor.

With Prang Besar Estate no longer in existence, a majority of the former estate workers were relocated to low-cost flats in Dengkil. The estate they had called home for decades was no more and the close community living is all but a fond memory now.

Rubber tapper Subramaniam Munusamy, 45, of Semenyih Estate, firmly believes that they should be compensated with permanent homes. “Semenyih has been my home for nearly three decades. Following the notice of termination of employment from the landowners five years ago, we were offered flats in Nilai,” he told StarMetro during a recent interview at the estate workers quarters. “But this means starting all over again. We have asked for low-cost houses in Semenyih in recognition of our blood, sweat and tears for a commodity which is fetching high prices in the world market,” Subramaniam said.

Since they stopped working for the Semenyih Estate, Subramaniam and his wife Anjalai Devi Chinalagan, 43, have been tapping rubber on a plot of land belonging to a smallholder for daily wages. Their combined monthly income is barely RM1,300. The couple, who have four children, said they could not retire for at least 20 more years. Like everyone else, they hope to enjoy the comforts of living in a house of their own in the near future. The struggle to gain a permanent roof over their heads began five years ago with little progress to show since.

For retirees like Mariayee Palaniappa, 59, and Munichy Muniandy, 53, their meagre incomes come from picking flowers for which they are paid RM8 per tin.

Estate resident Devi Ganie, 30, meanwhile, takes on odd jobs, leaving her five-year-old son B. Mathialagan in the care of neighbours.

Life is hard but the women share some little joy and comfort through communal living.

Back when it was a functioning estate, the Semenyih Estate was home to 100 Indian families. There are only 16 families left now. The others have left to seek their fortunes elsewhere after obtaining their dues from the landowners.

Meanwhile, a looming threat of displacement currently hangs over the Dunedin Estate workers. Dunedin, located 3km from Semenyih town, is still functioning as an oil palm plantation and, like the Semenyih Estate, was established around a century ago.

According to plantation worker Arumugam Subramaniam, 51, and his wife Sarojini Paramasivam, 44, there is talk of the plantation being sold for development but they have yet to receive any notice from the landowners. “There used to be over 100 families here but only a fraction are left now since the rumours began. If the landowners want us to move, we hope to be provided with houses nearby,” Arumugam said.

“As far as income goes, we are paid daily wages, base pay, cost of living allowance (Cola) and other allowances. It is hard to make sense of the pay slip but basically, my wife and I jointly earn around RM1,250 a month,” he said. “In view of the surge in commodity prices and inflation, the Malaysian Agricultural Producers Association (Mapa) should increase the Cola while the NUPW should push for a higher minimum wage,” he said.

Retiree Baby Angamuthu, 57, in reminiscing how life in the estate was 50 years ago, said that little had changed in the estate community all these years. “We are still living in deplorable conditions although oil palm is a priceless commodity. Some of the quarters are infested with termites, the drainage system is poor and dengue is a constant threat,” she said, cuddling her seven-month-old grandson Thinakaran Murugan.

At present, the future looks bleak for the young generation but parents like Subramaniam and Arumugam realize the importance of education and have sent their children to school. They hope that their children, armed with an education, could leave the estates to work, and break the cycle of poverty.

Parti Sosialis Malaysia (PSM) estate liaison officer Ramalingam Thirumalai can identify with the estate workers struggle concerning displacement. “We at the Sungai Rinching Estate fought for 10 years for our houses. The struggle was long and difficult but we emerged victorious and we also realised that it was better to stand together,” he said.

There is strength in numbers which is why PSM secretary-general and Kajang Municipal councillor S. Arutchelvan wants to mobilise together the estate workers of Semenyih, Dunedin, Bangi and Glengowrie to demand for housing. “Breaking up the communities of estate workers leads to a negative impact on their psyche as they already feel neglected and cast aside,” Arutchelvan said. “With a proper area set aside for housing, displace estate workers can ask for a school, hall and places of worship,” he said.

During his recent visits to the estates, Selangor health, plantation workers and caring government committee chairman Dr Xavier Jeyakumar gave the landowners a timely reminder. Land status conversion for estates with 40ha and above will only be approved if the landowners agree to provide housing for displaced estate workers. This is the condition imposed by the state government,” Xavier said. At present, there are 113 estates in Selangor seeking land status conversion. Xavier also urged estate owners to give preference and priority to locals when hiring workers and not only employ foreigners.