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By But as the reliance on foreign labour has increased, so have complaints of abusive working and living conditions for workers, who come mainly from In the past two years, seven Malaysian firms, including the world's biggest glove maker and palm oil producer, have faced U.S. import bans over allegations of forced labour. Last month, high-tech home-appliance maker Dyson Ltd cut ties with its biggest supplier, a Malaysian firm, over labour conditions. "It is a wakeup call," said Human Resources Minister " Hurst said queries from global investors about Other Asian manufacturing hubs, including FORCED-LABOUR INDICATORS Malaysian officials have acknowledged excessive overtime hours, unpaid wages, lack of rest days and unhygienic dormitories. Those conditions are among 11 indicators of forced labour, according to the International Labour Organisation (ILO). Malaysian law allows more than the widely accepted maximum of 60 hours of work a week and allows work on what are supposed to be rest days. "The legal framework in The country is the world's second-largest palm oil exporter and its chip-assembly industry accounts for more than a tenth of global chip trade. Foreign workers are concentrated in manufacturing, agriculture, construction and services. As Malaysians shy away from lower-paid, labour-intensive work, the country's electronics and palm oil companies especially are relying on migrants, whose treatment is gaining scrutiny. Dyson terminated its contract with parts maker ATA IMS Bhd just months after the Malaysian firm posted record profits. ATA has acknowledged some violations , made some improvements and said it now complies with all regulations and standards. ATA told Reuters in a statement it is stepping up practices for sustainable and equitable growth amid scrutiny of the company and "For ATA, this has meant relooking at some of the practices that have long been a norm, not just in 'MODERN SLAVERY' When U.S. customs revoked the ban after Top Glove made the changes. Top Glove told Reuters in a statement that exporters must "follow the best global practices as customer expectations have changed over the years," adding it was "no longer sufficient for businesses to just be cost-efficient". Its peers also decided to repay recruitment fees. Palm oil producers in To be sure, higher costs from improving working and living conditions may not necessarily drive away investors. "Companies operating in The impact on the electronics industry, which accounts for nearly 40% of Dell Inc, Samsung Electronics Co and Western Digital Corp have manufacturing facilities in Samsung declined to comment. The other tech firms did not respond to Reuters' requests for comment on their Malaysian operations or suppliers. "If companies start scrutinising and pulling out contracts" from electric and electronics companies, "it will have a knock-on effect on the economy," said AmBank's Dass. (Corrects company unit name in paragraph 29 to Fitch Ratings, not Fitch Solutions) (Reporting by
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