Tenaganita

Tenaganita Tenaganita: Protecting & promoting the rights of women, migrants & refugees

Tenaganita was founded in 1991, born out of the struggles of women workers in the plantations and industrial sectors to gain their rights as workers; for decent wages, decent living conditions and to stop discrimination and gender based-violence. In responding to the grievous human rights violations affecting various sectors of the population, Tenaganita’s scope has grown to address issues of ex

ploitation, discrimination, unequal treatment and violence not just against women, but also against refugees, documented and undocumented migrant workers, trafficked persons, domestic workers, s*x workers and people living with HIV/AIDS. The organization currently has three major focus areas of work: Migrant and Refugee Rights Protection; Anti-trafficking in Persons; and Business Accountability and Responsibility.

08/05/2026

While Tenaganita is not an expert on the full scope of the National Social Policy Action Plan (PTDSN) 2026–2030, we welcome efforts to strengthen social development and improve coordination across agencies.

From our work with migrant workers, refugees, trafficking survivors, plantation communities, women and low-income families, we believe social policies must place dignity, accessibility and structural inequalities at the centre of implementation. The goal of helping welfare recipients become self-reliant is important.
However, self-reliance cannot be achieved simply by reducing aid or expecting people to “work harder” while they remain trapped in low wages, insecure work, debt, exploitation, poor healthcare access, and systems that continue to exclude them.

Real empowerment requires decent work, fair wages, strong labour protections, accessible healthcare, childcare, education, mental health support, and protection from violence and exploitation. It also means ensuring vulnerable communities , including migrants and undocumented persons, are treated with dignity and inclusion, not fear and exclusion.

While digitalization and AI may improve efficiency, safeguards are needed to ensure vulnerable groups are not left behind due to language barriers, lack of documentation, digital illiteracy, or fear of authorities.

Ultimately, social protection should not only focus on reducing dependency, but on restoring dignity, expanding opportunities, and ensuring that no one is left behind.

https://www.thestar.com.my/news/nation/2026/05/08/advocates-new-plan-must-uplift-vulnerable-groups?fbclid=IwY2xjawRqlxRleHRuA2FlbQIxMQBzcnRjBmFwcF9pZBAyMjIwMzkxNzg4MjAwODkyAAEeG_JgLewuoR47fWXr3l-SmIs7QUcyx2mqkuYLB-SzSzYFmpplgYFn6WRMDuU_aem_6bPf-Ji_7Tt_yUlDEWXivQ

08/05/2026

Katie Fung of Tenaganita raises concerns over immigration detention conditions, gaps in documentation systems and the separation of migrant workers from their families.

As the 2nd IMRF concludes this week, she calls for policies and enforcement practices that are victim- and human rights-centred, and for systems that protect people, not punish them.

No one should be detained, dehumanised or separated from their loved ones.



The recent exposure of a s*x trafficking scheme, where women were promised legitimate massage therapist jobs in Malaysia...
04/05/2026

The recent exposure of a s*x trafficking scheme, where women were promised legitimate massage therapist jobs in Malaysia but instead forced into s*xual exploitation, is deeply disturbing and, unfortunately, not new.

This reflects a well-known pattern, when women are lured with promises of decent work, only to be trapped in systems of coercion, abuse, and control once they arrive.

Malaysia has long been a destination where migrant women, misled by recruiters, are exploited under false pretenses.

Malaysia must be alert. We cannot continue to ignore how our systems of recruitment, migration governance, and weak enforcement, are being manipulated to facilitate the exploitation of women. These are not isolated incidents; they are part of a deeply entrenched, cross-border trafficking network sustained by deception, profit, and, at times, complicity.

We cannot allow Malaysia to be a destination where women arrive with hope, and are instead met with violence and exploitation.

This is not just a failure of enforcement. It is a failure of systems and it must end.

Senator Raffy Tulfo exposes a brutal s*x trafficking scheme luring Filipinos with fake massage jobs in Malaysia, calling for mandatory TESDA checks to protect OFWs.

Happy Labour Day.Today, we celebrate workers everywhere, but we must also remember those who remain unseen, unheard, and...
01/05/2026

Happy Labour Day.

Today, we celebrate workers everywhere, but we must also remember those who remain unseen, unheard, and unprotected.

The women who wake before dawn to care for homes that are not their own.

The men who build our cities, clean our spaces, harvest our food,often without rest, without recognition, without rights.

The migrant, refugee, and undocumented workers who live in the shadows of our economy, yet hold it up with their labour.

Their work is essential.
Their dignity is non-negotiable.

At Tenaganita, we are constantly reminded that behind every statistic is a life,someone who has endured unpaid wages, long hours, abuse, isolation, and the quiet violence of being made invisible.

This Labour Day, let us not only celebrate but reflect, question, and act.

Let us stand in solidarity with those who are denied fair wages, safe working conditions, and the basic right to be seen and hear

These articles say it all !!!confusion, contradictions, and a system that still lacks transparency.Let’s be clear: it’s ...
28/04/2026

These articles say it all !!!
confusion, contradictions, and a system that still lacks transparency.

Let’s be clear: it’s not about FWCMS or any “new system.” We’ve seen this before. Change the platform, but if accountability is missing, exploitation continues.

Without transparency, independent oversight, and real enforcement, workers will keep paying the price , through debt, abuse, and silence.

Malaysia doesn’t need another system. We need a rights-based migration framework: zero recruitment fees, enforceable contracts, and accountability at every level.

Until then, it’s the same story, just repackaged.
https://thesun.my/business/keep-foreign-worker-system-reforms-on-track-says-mamba/
https://aliran.com/thinking-allowed-online/two-positions-one-minister-malaysias-migrant-labour-mess-just-got-messier
https://www.nst.com.my/business/corporate/2026/04/1427245/politicising-fwcms-may-set-back-progress-made-managing-foreign -

KUALA LUMPUR: Politicising Foreign Worker Centralised Management System (FWCMS) could undermine the progress made in improving governance, efficiency and transparency in foreign worker recruitment, Malaysian Micro Business Association (Mamba) said.

Great Work Immigration Dept but we cannot treat this as a one-off success We must ensure rigorous implementation of ATIP...
27/04/2026

Great Work Immigration Dept but we cannot treat this as a one-off success We must ensure rigorous implementation of ATIPSOM by going after the full chain of accountability, on both sides of the border, including local enablers, complicit officials, and systemic loopholes that allow such operations to thrive. While Indonesian syndicates may be implicated, it is equally critical for Malaysia to confront its own governance failures, including weak oversight and corruption, which continue to enable and sustain migrant smuggling networks.

KUALA LUMPUR, April 26 — The Malaysian Immigration Department (JIM) foiled an attempt to smuggle Indonesian migrants using layered travel routes and fake entry stamps, following...

19/04/2026

PRESS STATEMENT
Malaysia Cannot Afford Another Failed Migration System
Tenaganita takes serious note of the Minister’s denial regarding the reported involvement of private entities in Malaysia’s migrant worker recruitment system. However, a simple denial is no longer sufficient.
At this stage, public confidence has been deeply eroded. Years of shifting positions, policy reversals, and unfulfilled commitments have left little room for trust. When the Minister states that he is unaware of the details, it raises more concern than reassurance. This reflects a troubling pattern, where decisions appear to move forward without transparency, only to be denied or clarified after public exposure.
This is not just about one company or one system. It is about governance, accountability, and whether Malaysia is prepared to confront the deep structural failures that have long defined its labour migration regime.
Malaysia has a well-documented history of opaque recruitment systems, monopolistic arrangements, and private intermediaries gaining tremendously at the expense of migrant workers. In this context, the government must provide a clear and unequivocal position on whether companies such as Bestinet Sdn Bhd will play any role in future systems. Ambiguity is no longer acceptable.
Direct Hiring Is Not a Silver Bullet
The promotion of “direct hiring” as a solution must also be approached with caution.
While reducing layers of intermediaries may appear progressive, the reality is far more complex. Without strong safeguards, direct hiring risks simply shifting exploitation from agents to employers.
In the absence of a regulated and transparent framework, what we risk is not reform, but a quiet reshaping of exploitation.
Employers may begin to take on recruitment roles without any real systems of accountability, effectively stepping into the place once occupied by agents, but without the scrutiny or regulation that should come with such responsibility. At the same time, workers remain vulnerable to hidden and unregulated recruitment fees, often pushed through informal channels that leave them indebted before they even begin work.
Without independent oversight, the most basic safeguards, fair contracts, timely wages, and humane working conditions. can easily fall through the cracks, with no one monitoring compliance and no effective avenue for redress when abuses occur.
In such a system, exploitation does not disappear. It simply shifts, adapts, and continues, taking on a different form, but with the same devastating consequences for workers. Direct hiring alone does not dismantle exploitation. It can, in fact, deepen vulnerability.
What Malaysia urgently needs is not another isolated policy shift, but a comprehensive national labour migration framework, one that ensures zero recruitment fees, enforces standardized contracts, guarantees independent grievance mechanisms, and delivers consistent enforcement against abusive practices, said , Joseph Maliamauv of Tenaganita ‘s Business and Accountability Program. Crucially, any reform must be informed by those working directly with affected communities, civil society organizations, frontline responders, and migrant workers themselves, not shaped solely by consultants or industry interests,
A System That Has Failed Workers Cannot Be Called Effective
Abdul Aziz Bin Ismail of Tenaganita’s Migrant Rights ProgRam said that the claim that the current Foreign Workers Centralized Management System (FWCMS) is “effective” must be firmly challenged. Effectiveness cannot be measured by technological performance alone. The real measure is whether workers are protected. From Tenaganita’s experience on the ground, the system has failed, profoundly.
Since 2023, more than 400,000 migrant workers have entered Malaysia only to find themselves without employers, without valid work permits, and without basic protections. Many have been left stranded, forced into irregular work, and exposed to severe exploitation.
This is not a technical glitch. This is a systemic failure. This is a national disgrace.
To date, there has been no meaningful remedy. Workers remain without wages, without justice, and without recourse. So , digital systems cannot replace accountability. Without transparency, oversight, and rights-based safeguards, centralization can entrench abuse at scale rather than eliminate it.
No More Recycling Failed Systems
Malaysia does not need another system repackaged under a different name.
We do not support the involvement of Bestinet Sdn Bhd or any continuation or reincarnation of models that have already caused widespread harm.
In the absence of a regulated and transparent framework, what we risk is not reform, but a quiet reshaping of exploitation. Employers may begin to take on recruitment roles without any real systems of accountability, effectively stepping into the place once occupied by agents, but without the scrutiny or regulation that should come with such responsibility. At the same time, workers remain vulnerable to hidden and unregulated recruitment fees, often pushed through informal channels that leave them indebted before they even begin work.
Without independent oversight, the most basic safeguards, fair contracts, timely wages, and humane working conditions, can easily fall through the cracks, with no one monitoring compliance and no effective avenue for redress when abuses occur. In such a system, exploitation does not disappear. It simply shifts, adapts, and continues, taking on a different form, but with the same devastating consequences for workers. Most importantly, no new system should be introduced until there is full acknowledgement of what has gone wrong. Reform cannot begin without truth.
Our Position
Malaysia stands at a critical crossroads.
We can continue down the path of fragmented, unethical gaining , and profit-driven systems, or we can choose to rebuild a migration governance framework that is just, transparent, and centred on human dignity.
Anything less will only reproduce the same cycles of exploitation under a different name.
Tenaganita calls on the government to act with honesty, courage, and accountability.
The lives, rights, and dignity of migrant workers or any workers demand nothing less.
THE END Glorene A Das Executive Director

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fr4Sg3tmx70

The published article , for those interested !
10/04/2026

The published article , for those interested !

Chempaka Emalin Pahamin, Jasmine Wong, Adlyn Adam Teoh and Glorene Das recount their journeys in law, human rights and youth engagement.

Today, 31st March, we remember Irene Fernandez, our co founder . A woman of courage, conviction, and deep love for the o...
31/03/2026

Today, 31st March, we remember Irene Fernandez, our co founder . A woman of courage, conviction, and deep love for the oppressed.

Her life was a relentless fight for justice, especially for migrant workers, women, and the most marginalized among us.

Though she is no longer with us, her spirit lives on in every struggle for dignity and rights.

May we continue her work with the same fire, compassion, and unwavering commitment.

Always loved and remembered.

Thank you so much for including us in the discussions
27/03/2026

Thank you so much for including us in the discussions

Human trafficking looks different today than it did a decade ago. It’s evolving quickly in our digital world, and we need to keep up.

On 13 February 2026, AirAsia Foundation brought together frontliners across ASEAN at RedQ to explore one important question: How is human trafficking changing in the age of technology? 💻🚨

We were joined by dedicated representatives from Tenaganita, Global Shepherds, IJM Malaysia, SUHAKAM (Human Rights Commission of Malaysia), Project Liber8, LIFT International, Our Journey, Freedom Ports Alliance (FPA), and Chab Dai. Together with AirAsia’s own frontliners, including Cabin Crew, Security, and Ground Staff, they shared powerful stories and insights that deepened our understanding of this complex issue.

Here’s what we learned:
≫ Trafficking is moving online. Exploitation now appears in new forms such as fake job offers, online scams, and social media recruitment.
≫ Tactics are getting smarter. Traffickers are using AI and digital tools to hide their tracks, making victims harder to identify.
≫ Old dangers remain. While scam trafficking dominates headlines, labour and s*x trafficking continue every day, and many victims still struggle to access help.

These insights are already shaping action within AirAsia. We are refreshing our internal anti-trafficking training and exploring technology-based, victim-centred approaches to make our response stronger and more compassionate.

Ending trafficking is not a task for one group alone. Real progress happens when communities and businesses keep their eyes open and act responsibly to protect those who are most vulnerable. 🤝🏻

Join us. Act now. Reach out.

Malaysia’s location makes it easy for Indonesians, Bangladeshis, Nepalis, Filipinos and Myanmar nationals to migrate to ...
25/03/2026

Malaysia’s location makes it easy for Indonesians, Bangladeshis, Nepalis, Filipinos and Myanmar nationals to migrate to Malaysia or be smuggled in.

There are growing concerns that Malaysia is becoming a transit country before victims are trafficked or smuggled to New Zealand and Australia.

Tenaganita's Glorene Das says the ‘complex’ recruitment process also contributes to the problem.

Address

No 12, Jalan 6/11, Seksyen 6
Petaling Jaya
46000

Opening Hours

Monday 09:30 - 18:00
Tuesday 09:30 - 17:00
Wednesday 09:30 - 17:00
Thursday 09:30 - 17:00
Friday 09:30 - 17:00

Telephone

+60377703671

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Tenaganita posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organization

Send a message to Tenaganita:

Share