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Zealand
New Zealand government to introduce cheap labour scheme for
Pacific Island workers
By John Braddock
20 February 2007
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The New Zealand Labour government is preparing to launch a
cheap labour scheme for seasonal workers from the Pacific Islands
to fill shortages in the countrys commodity-producing industries.
The Recognised Seasonal Employer policy, announced last October
and due to begin in April, will provide temporary work permits
for up to 5,000 Pacific Island workers each year.
The six Pacific countries initially identified to supply the
workers are; Fiji, Samoa, Tonga, Kiribati, Tuvalu and Vanuatu.
Fiji citizens, however, have since been excluded under sanctions
imposed by New Zealand on Fiji following the military coup there
last December.
Details announced by Immigration Minister David Cunliffe and
Employment Minister David Benson-Pope indicate that the scheme
has been set up to provide a pool of cheap labour for New Zealand
employers. Workers are likely to receive only the minimum adult
wage of $NZ 11.25 per hour, plus basic food and lodging. They
will be classified as temporary migrants and forced to return
home after seven months. Workers will have to have a specific
job offer from a New Zealand employer who qualifies under the
scheme. Employers will only be required to pay half the workers
airfare.
The government has promoted the policy as recognising New Zealands
special relationship with and commitment to the Pacific
region, claiming it will lead to the up-skilling of Pacific
workers and contribute to Pacific development. In
fact the opposite is the caseNew Zealand is using its position
as a minor imperial power in the region to cynically exploit desperately
impoverished and oppressed Pacific peoples for its own economic
ends.
The policy is designed to address chronic labour shortages
in the horticulture and viticulture industries, which depend on
the availability of an on-demand, mobile and largely unskilled
workforce to pick fruit and harvest crops. According to Cunliffe,
the scheme will enable employers to meet their labour needs
through facilitating a productive, accessible workforce.
Giving the lie to claims that the plan is a benevolent move to
assist Pacific development, Benson-Pope emphasised that it protects
New Zealanders employment opportunities by ensuring
that employers can only take part after confirming there
are no Kiwis available.
History of discrimination
New Zealand governments of all stripes have a long and tainted
history of imposing discriminatory and draconian labour and immigration
controls over Pacific Islanders. When severe labour shortages
developed in the early 1960s, thousands of Pacific workers were
recruited for menial and factory jobs, only to subsequently find
themselves victimised by hostile and racist immigration laws.
During the 1970s, many Pacific immigrant families were torn
apart when police and immigration officials forcibly seized workers
and their dependents, classified as overstayers, in
a series of dawn raids, then summarily expelled them from the
country. Since then, immigration and work permit policies have
been deliberately framed to advantage those with money and business
or entrepreneurial skillsusually from European
or, more recently, Asian backgrounds. Impoverished workers from
the nearby Pacific are required to apply for special access via
a non-skilled category.
The new policy is being implemented after earlier being dismissed
by Prime Minister Helen Clark when it was originally put forward
by Pacific Forum leaders. At a Forum leaders retreat in
Papua New Guinea in October 2005, representatives of the small
Pacific states claimed that under the so-called Pacific
Plan moves towards greater economic co-operation
should include increased mobility for short-term and seasonal
workers between the 16 Forum countries. Labour mobility is regarded
as essential by Pacific leaders because remittances from expatriate
workers are critical for the survival of the island economies
and therefore of their own political and social privileges.
At the time, both Clark and Australian Prime Minister John
Howard promptly scuttled the suggestion, saying they had long
standing reservations. Both leaders feared that seasonal
workers could develop into a major immigration headache,
making it more difficult to control the movement of people. If
a case is to be made for ... seasonal permits from the Pacific,
our foremost concern would be that people do go home at the end
of the permit, Clark said. Obviously our first obligation
is to our own people.
The about-face by the Clark government is the product of two
factors. Labour shortages within the horticulture and viticulture
industries have become acute in recent years, prompting a significant
growth in the use of illegal and itinerant foreign labour, with
a rising number of prosecutions for work permit and immigration
violations. The new plan is an attempt to regularise and control
the industry and, by keeping wages low and permits rigidly enforced
through toughened compliance measures, to discourage employers
from establishing an unofficial black market in seasonal employment.
Strategically, it is being used to reinforce New Zealands
posturing as the friendly face of imperial power in
the region. While New Zealand invariably supports Australian political
demands and military adventures, it defends its own interests
by posturing as a restraining influence on Australian unilateralism.
There are growing concerns within New Zealand ruling circles
over the fracturing of long-standing relations within the Pacific
and the emergence of regional hostility to the resurgence of Australian
and New Zealand neo-colonialism. Writing in the Dominion Post
newspaper last month, in a comment entitled Keeping a neighbourly
watch, former leading diplomat Terence OBrien canvassed
various options by which the two dominant nations could continue
to deliver tough messages and insist that hard choices be
made while avoiding accusations of gross interference.
According to OBrien, the fundamental lesson they had to
learn was how to provide expedient insulation, in
order to avoid damaging head-on political and diplomatic
confrontation.
This is one of the primary goals of the seasonal worker policy.
It received immediate praise from Pacific politicians, business
leaders and the media. The NZ Pacific Business Council estimated
that it would pump remittances of $US19.8 million to $23.2 million
per annum into participating Pacific Island countries. Anticipating
that the scheme will be opened up to others, the Solomon Star
newspaper editorialised that unless Australia did the same, Pacific
Islanders would continue to see Australia as a country interested
only in pursuing its agendas in the region and neglecting the
voice of its many small and powerless neighbours. The Clark
government had, the paper concluded, started a new way of
Pacific cooperation [and] we hope Howard will follow suit.
Any tactical displays of cooperation by the Clark
government are, however, purely for show. New Zealand military
and police personnel have been deployed alongside those from Australia
in East Timor, the Solomon Islands and Tonga over the past twelve
months, and sanctions have been applied against Fiji. Last month,
New Zealands commitment to the imposition of brutal colonial
rule in the Pacific was emphasised in a major speech by Foreign
Minister Winston Peters. Taking a swipe at critics of the US and
Australia, Peters said the two countries involvement in
the Pacific was crucial. We need the United States, as well
as Australia, to be intimately engaged in the Pacific if we are
to be successful in our own endeavours, he declared.
See Also:
New Zealand PM quashes criticism
of US military escalation in Iraq
[16 January 2007]
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