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Migrant Trade Union President Udaya Rai holds a one-person demonstration outside of the Seoul Labor and Employment Office in Myeongdong on Dec. 4 to advocate for the abolishment of migrant worker’s board and lodging deduction guidelines. (by Cho Il-jun, staff reporter)
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Participants are calling for an end to mandatory deductions for employees’ board and lodging
It was around noon on Dec. 4, with midday temperatures of zero degrees Celsius – five below with the wind-chill factor. In front of the Seoul Labor and Employment office in Myeongdong, Migrant Trade Union (MTU) President Udaya Rai was braving the icy winds to carry out a one-man demonstration. The day marked the beginning of two weeks of one-person demonstrations all around South Korea through Dec. 15, with participants in Seoul, Gyeonggi Province, North Chungcheong Province, Daegu, Busan, and elsewhere calling for an end to the migrant workers’ board and lodging deduction guidelines. Members of the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU) and various local migrant worker groups are taking part.
The word “poor” does not do justice to the living environment for migrant workers in South Korea. The nature of livestock and farming workplaces in the provinces, isolated as they are from the outside world, is such that much of the housing is positively grim: container boxes and vinyl greenhouses that lack heating or air conditioning and leak when it rains. Bathrooms are often slapped-together temporary units just outside the dormitory. Most of the housing does not have locks, leaving female workers in particular defenseless against predatory behavior by employers and others. In exchange for this housing, migrant workers have up to 20% deducted from their already minimum wage-level pay.
Accompanying Rai at his one-person demonstration was Kishor Lama, a 34-year-old from Nepali who works with two other migrant workers at a business in Gimpo, Gyeonggi Province, collecting and selling materials for metal recycling. Lama lives in a container box that has been repurposed as a temporary building. His employment contract has him earning regular wages of 1.26 million won (US$1,160) for 20 eight-hour days of work a month, not including holidays. It comes out to just minimum wage. Free lunches were provided, along with “other temporary residential facilities” at the worker’s expense.
Yet the amount Lama took home last month was only 900,000 won (US$830) – his employer having arbitrarily deducted 360,000 won (US$330). It seemed like a huge amount to have taken out, yet Lama has no way of knowing the specifics of the deduction. He receives no pay slip, and his employment contract does not indicate housing or food costs. Sometimes he is told there is no work to do, and the day is subtracted from his pay; other times, he is made to work on days off without any extra pay. It’s a violation of his employment contract – and thus the law.
In Nepal, Lama is a member of the elite, a graduate of Tribhuvan University of Nepal who worked as a reported for a local weekly before arriving in South Korea through the employment permit system in spring 2015. Yet even he is helpless in the face of the injustices suffered by migrant workers here.
In Feb. 2017, the Ministry of Employment and Labor created guidelines for providing food and lodging information for foreign workers and deducting related expenses, a system that went into effect in March. They state that up to 20% of regular wages can be deducted from migrant workers’ wages in advance for food and lodging with their written consent. When both food and lodging are provided, the deduction is 20% for an apartment, detached home, or row/multiplex housing and 31% for other temporary residences. When only lodging is provided, the respective deductions are 15% and 8%. Almost without exception, employers take the maximum.
In the case of 1.26 million won in monthly pay and a container box for accommodations, the deduction comes out to just 100,000 won (US$92). In Lama’s case, however, three to four times that has been deducted for various incomprehensible reasons.
Some question the very legality of the prior deduction system. Article 43-1 of the Labor Standards Act states that “payment of wages shall be directly made in full to workers in currency.” But the Ministry of Employment and Labor recognizes prior deductions with written consent, citing an Oct. 2011 Supreme Court decision finding it not in violation of the “payment in full“ principle provided the worker consents “of his or her own free will.”
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Migrant workers gather in front of Boshingak, in the Jongno District of Seoul, on April 30 (a day before May Day) to call for freedom of movement, an end to mandatory board and lodging deductions, and abolition of the Employment Permit System. (by Cho Il-jun, staff reporter)
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