International Roundup
The
Immigration Department of Malaysia has warned foreign workers not to abuse their
working permits, The Malay Mail of
Kuala Lampur reports. The stern
warning was issued by Immigration enforcement director Datuk Ishak Mohamad last
week after his officers discovered after a crackdown that many foreign workers
had not followed the terms of their permits.
During a recent crackdown at Pudu market, department officers rounded up 130
foreigners, including 15 women, for committing various offences such as
possessing false travel documents and overstaying.
Checks revealed that some of the illegal immigrants were running
businesses at the market illegally.
"According to their working permits, they were in the country to work in
specific fields. But they were found running stalls at the market," said
Ishak. "We are still
investigating what their employers have been doing. We may charge them in
court,' he added.
All the foreigners who were detained, aged between 20 and 40 years, would be
sent to the Semenyih Immigration depot. Ishak
said that even if the workers had entered the country legally, they would be
considered illegal immigrants once they abused their working permits.
*****
Plans
to fingerprint passengers at the
The fingerprinting plan will affect all domestic passengers using a special
airport terminal, officially opened by Queen Elizabeth earlier this month, as
well as international passengers transferring onto internal flights. Prints
will be taken when passengers first go through security, and then checked at the
gate, ensuring that the individual boarding the plane is the same person who
first checked in. Without a security measure of this type, it might be possible
for a terrorist to arrive at Heathrow on a transit flight, then exchange
boarding passes with a colleague in the departure lounge and join a domestic
flight to enter the
The Information Commissioners' Office has raised concerns over why BAA wants to
use fingerprinting at Heathrow, when other
'The data is encrypted immediately and is destroyed within 24 hours of use, in
accordance with the Data Protection Act. It does not include personal details
nor is it cross-referenced with any other database."
The Home Office said that BAA was required to ensure that arrangements at
Terminal 5 did not breach border security, but that there was no requirement for
this to involve fingerprinting. "Our
concern is that the