Advertisement
Coronavirus: Singapore migrant workers yearn for freedom as strict curbs persist
- Curbs have been eased for most in Singapore, where vaccinated people can go out shopping and to restaurants
- But the low-paid migrants remain subject to strict restrictions that mostly allow them to travel only between their work and dorms
Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP

Bangladeshi migrant worker MD Sharif Uddin used to spend his days off with friends outside his cramped Singapore dormitory, but coronavirus curbs have for 18 months left him stuck inside during his spare time.
More than 300,000 migrant workers, many of them from South Asia, live in dorms in the prosperous city state, where they are typically packed into shared rooms and sleep on bunk beds.
The vast complexes were hit by Covid-19 and locked down at the start of the pandemic, while restrictions were introduced across the whole island nation for a period to prevent a broader outbreak.
Advertisement
Curbs have been eased for most in Singapore, where – despite currently facing a renewed virus wave – vaccinated people can go out shopping and to restaurants, and borders are gradually reopening.
But it is a different story for the low-paid migrants, who remain subject to far more onerous restrictions that mostly allow them to travel only between their work and accommodation.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x