Business

Taiwan job portal removes 179 listings over human trafficking fears

Website blocks postings from ‘high-risk countries’ such as Cambodia, the Philippines, Myanmar, Laos, Thailand

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 16 Aug 2022 6:30PM

Taiwan job portal removes 179 listings over human trafficking fears
Taiwan’s 104 Job Bank announces that it has removed 179 job postings in ‘high-risk countries or areas,’ including Cambodia, the Philippines, Myanmar, Laos and Thailand over recent concerns of human trafficking. – Pixabay pic, August 16, 2022

TAIPEI – One of Taiwan’s leading online job banks has removed more than 100 overseas job openings posted on its website because of recent concerns over human traffickers’ attempts to lure Taiwanese to Cambodia through the promise of high-paying jobs.

Taiwan’s 104 Job Bank said today it has removed 179 job postings in “high-risk countries or areas,” including Cambodia, the Philippines, Myanmar, Laos and Thailand, that have been provided by 37 companies.

Other countries considered to be high risk include the United Arab Emirates, Kenya, Turkey and Uganda, the Central News Agency reported.

The removal of the job postings were the result of the 104 Job Bank’s tightening of standards for overseas job listings advertised by both companies based in Taiwan and those operating overseas, it said.

Taiwan-based companies must now be publicly listed and have had their investment in the overseas company formally approved by the Investment Commission to be able to list job openings overseas, the 104 Job Bank said.

It also reported that at the same time, companies operating in high-risk countries will not be allowed to post job openings on the 104 Job Bank website unless they are well-known publicly listed enterprises.

Commenting on the recent overseas job scam threat, the agency cautioned people against entertaining job offers that seem too good to be true, and it said it will cooperate with police and continue to look for suspicious job openings posted on its platform.

According to the National Police Agency, many Taiwanese citizens have fallen prey to human traffickers to take non-existent jobs in Cambodia and have been abused after arriving there. – Bernama, August 16, 2022

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