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Indonesian migrant workers in Taiwan face struggles, discrimination

  • Lured to Taiwan by the prospects of a good job, Tari Sasha instead found empty promises and verbal abuse
  • Tari said that some Indonesian workers were made to feel as if they were ‘all dangerous’ during the Covid-19 pandemic on the island

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Indonesian women stroll around Taipei in 2016. Photo: Getty Images
The Indonesian narrator utters the words, “Taiwan is not as beautiful as profile pictures on Facebook”.
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That thought is followed by another proclamation.

“Sponsors [labour brokers] and PJTKI (Indonesian migrant worker placement companies) always have sweet promises to spread persuasion. Promises sometimes contradict reality [in Taiwan].”

The lines were spoken by Tari Sasha, the main character of the 17-minute long animated documentary Homebound. It continues the stories explored in the documentary Help is On the Way, highlighting the struggles of an Indonesian migrant worker living in Taiwan and her desire to return home. The film was turned into an animation after Taiwan’s Covid-19 travel restrictions made it impossible to film on the island.

The 38-year-old private nursing home worker first arrived in Taiwan in 2011, giving up her job selling insurance in the hopes of more lucrative opportunities.

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