PUTRAJAYA: Malaysia’s Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim pledged stronger protections for Bangladeshi migrant workers on Monday, after a series of labor abuses affecting the Southeast Asian nation’s largest foreign workforce.

Around 800,000 Bangladeshis work in Malaysia, making up a third of the country’s migrant workforce, who have faced unpaid wages and recruitment scams that left many job seekers stranded after paying hefty recruitment fees.

Speaking at a joint press conference with Bangladeshi Prime Minister Tarique Rahman, Anwar described “human resources cooperation, particularly the workers” as “critical for our survival.”

“This continued use of workers being exploited, ill-treated... purely for personal or company gains cannot be tolerated,” Anwar said.

Rahman, who is on his first foreign trip since he was elected Bangladesh’s prime minister in February, urged that recruitment be made “transparent, fair and affordable” with a reduction in the number of intermediaries.