The Ministry of Social Affairs Prepares Assistance for Troubled PMIs from Malaysia
JAKARTA
(June 23, 2021) – The Ministry of
Social Affairs through the Social Rehabilitation Center is ready to provide
assistance for Troubled Indonesian Migrant Workers (PMIB) from Malaysia who
experience problems or obstacles during the repatriation process to their area
of origin.
This was conveyed by the Director General of
Social Rehabilitation of the Ministry of Social Affairs Harry Hikmat at a
coordination meeting regarding the plan to repatriate PMIB from Malaysia which
was attended by the heads of the Social Rehabilitation Center online within the
Directorate General of Social Rehabilitation.
PMIB repatriation from Malaysia will begin on
June 24, 2021, for the first phase, and June 27, 2021, for the second phase.
They will be flown directly from Malaysia's Kuala Lumpur Airport to Tangerang's
Soekarno Hatta Airport. They will then undergo a 5-day quarantine period at the
Kemayoran Athlete's Wisma Pademangan, Jakarta before being sent back to their
hometown.
Regarding the repatriation of PMIBs, Harry
Hikmat stated that the Ministry of Social Affairs has a mandate to return home
in the context of social rehabilitation and social reintegration of PMIBs. The
Ministry of Social Affairs has continuously participated in the coordination
meetings coordinated by the Coordinating Ministry for Human Development and
Culture.
The coordination meeting was held to ensure
that the Indonesian government really prepared everything related to the
repatriation of PMIB including various anticipatory steps, considering that
Malaysia was experiencing a peak in COVID-19 cases and there was a total
lockdown policy from the Malaysian government. Currently, there are
approximately 7,200 PMIB deportees scattered throughout Malaysia's immigration
detention centers.
The repatriation of the deportants will be carried
out in stages so as not to accumulate at one point so that there is a
diversification of the arrival points of the PMIBs. The initial stage of
repatriation prioritized the deportees of vulnerable groups (ill, pregnant,
elderly, disabled women and children) as many as 293 people.