ေက်ာ္စြာ၀င္းဆိုတဲ့ ျမန္မာအလုပ္သမားတေယာက္ ဘြဲ႕လက္မွတ္အတုေတြႏွင့္ ၂၀၀၉ ခုႏွစ္က စကာၤပူကျမန္မာ အလုပ္သမား ရွာေဖြေရးကိုေပးခဲ့ၿပီး Employment Agency ကလဲ အြန္လိုင္းကေန S-pass ရေအာင္ေလွ်ာက္ထားေပးျပီး အစားအေသာက္စက္ရံုမွာ Supervisor အျဖစ္ႏွင့္္ ၀င္လုပ္ေစ ပါတယ္တဲ့၊
အမွန္တကယ္ေက်ာင္းၿပီးတာက အထက္တန္းအဆင့္ပဲရွိပါတယ္တဲ့ေလ၊
အခုမွ သတင္းအမွားေပးေတြရလို႔ သြားေရာက္ဖမ္းခဲ့ၿပီး EFMA Act အရတရားစြဲခဲ့တာပါ၊ အျပစ္ေပးခဲ့တဲ့ ျပစ္ဒဏ္က ေငြဒဏ္ ၁ေသာင္းခြဲႏွင့္ ေထာင္ဒဏ္ (၁)ႏွစ္က်ခံရမွာျဖစ္ပါတယ္တဲ့!
ဒီလိုဘဲ ၂၀၁၂ခုႏွစ္မွာ ၃၉မႈေတာင္ရွိၿပီး အနဲဆံုးေထာင္ဒဏ္ေပးတာ( ၉)လရွိတယ္တဲ့၊
အမ်ားအားျဖင့္ ပံုမွန္ဒဏ္ေပးေလ့ရွိတာက ၆ပတ္ေလာက္ဘဲ တရားရံုးကေပးေလ့ရွိပါတယ္တဲ့၊
ဒီႏွစ္စက္တင္ဘာလမွာ ပါရီမန္ကဥပေဒအသစ္ေတြကိုျပင္ဆင္ခဲ့တာျဖစ္ၿပီး တကယ္တန္းလက္မွတ္အတု ေတြႏွင့္ ႏိုင္ငံျခားသားေတြကို ဒဏ္ေပးတာကေငြဒဏ္ ၂ေသာင္းႏွင့္ ေထာင္ဒဏ္ (၂)ႏွစ္ ျဖစ္ပါေၾကာင္း သတိေပးလိုက္ပါတယ္၊
ကဲ! ျမန္မာျပည္က စကာၤပူပိုးထေနသူေတြကို သတိထားမိေစဖို႔ေရးသားလိုက္ရပါတယ္၊
အမွန္တကယ္ဘြဲ႕လက္မွတ္အမွန္အကန္ေတြႏွင့္ လာေစခ်င္ပါတယ္၊
မူရင္းကဒီမွာပါ...
Myanmar national charged with providing false information to MOM
Posted: 30 October 2012 2156 hrs
(Photo by: Anthony Chia, channelnewsasia.com)
SINGAPORE: The Ministry of Manpower (MOM) has charged a 28-year-old Myanmar national, Kyaw Swar Win, for furnishing false information to the Controller of Work Passes by submitting a forged academic certificate to obtain a work pass.
On Tuesday, Kyaw pleaded guilty to the charge in the Subordinate Courts, and was jailed four weeks.
MOM said investigations revealed that Kyaw was aware that his employment agency in Myanmar had misled the Ministry of Manpower to believe that he was a degree holder when an online application for an S pass was made for him to work as a supervisor for Leong Guan Food Manufacturer.
Kyaw was also given a copy of the forged certificate by the employment agent in Myanmar, which he submitted to MOM on April 23, 2009.
Kyaw had only received high school education in Myanmar.
For furnishing false information, Kyaw had flouted the Employment of Foreign Manpower Act (EFMA). He was arrested and subsequently charged in court.
The current penalty for the offence is a fine of up to S$15,000, a jail term of up to 12 months, or both.
In the first nine months of 2012, MOM had prosecuted 39 offenders for similar offences. Most of these offenders were jailed for up to six weeks by the court.
As part of the amendments passed in Parliament in September, the penalties under the EFMA will be enhanced to increase deterrence by the end of the year.
For example, the maximum fines for submission of forged academic certificates by foreign workers will be up to S$20,000 from the current maximum of S$15,000. Offenders may also be jailed for up to 24 months, up from the current 12 months.
(Photo by: Anthony Chia, channelnewsasia.com)
SINGAPORE: The Ministry of Manpower (MOM) has charged a 28-year-old Myanmar national, Kyaw Swar Win, for furnishing false information to the Controller of Work Passes by submitting a forged academic certificate to obtain a work pass.
On Tuesday, Kyaw pleaded guilty to the charge in the Subordinate Courts, and was jailed four weeks.
MOM said investigations revealed that Kyaw was aware that his employment agency in Myanmar had misled the Ministry of Manpower to believe that he was a degree holder when an online application for an S pass was made for him to work as a supervisor for Leong Guan Food Manufacturer.
Kyaw was also given a copy of the forged certificate by the employment agent in Myanmar, which he submitted to MOM on April 23, 2009.
Kyaw had only received high school education in Myanmar.
For furnishing false information, Kyaw had flouted the Employment of Foreign Manpower Act (EFMA). He was arrested and subsequently charged in court.
The current penalty for the offence is a fine of up to S$15,000, a jail term of up to 12 months, or both.
In the first nine months of 2012, MOM had prosecuted 39 offenders for similar offences. Most of these offenders were jailed for up to six weeks by the court.
As part of the amendments passed in Parliament in September, the penalties under the EFMA will be enhanced to increase deterrence by the end of the year.
For example, the maximum fines for submission of forged academic certificates by foreign workers will be up to S$20,000 from the current maximum of S$15,000. Offenders may also be jailed for up to 24 months, up from the current 12 months.
Ref;Chanelnewsasia
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