Twelve Cupcakes accused of underpaying 8 foreign employees over 2 years
SINGAPORE — Homegrown bakery chain Twelve Cupcakes has been charged with paying eight of its foreign employees less than their stipulated monthly salaries from 2017 to 2019.
SINGAPORE — Homegrown bakery chain Twelve Cupcakes has been charged with paying eight of its foreign employees less than their stipulated monthly salaries from 2017 to 2019.
The firm faces 29 counts of contravening rules under the Employment of Foreign Manpower Act pertaining to employers of S Pass holders.
First charged on Oct 1, it returned to court on Thursday (Oct 22) for a further mention of the case.
Court documents revealed the alleged underpayment concerned salaries for the months between December 2016 and January 2019.
One employee, identified as Ma Catleene Villacorta Dela Cruz, purportedly received a lower monthly salary during the entire 26-month period than the S$2,600 she was supposed to have received.
Another four employees allegedly received less than their monthly wages of between S$2,200 and S$2,600 for 24 months. They were identified as:
Ding Yujie
Guadiz Kareen Grace Capitle
Kenn Harold Galo Villareal
Zhu Weihong
Court documents did not specify how much Twelve Cupcakes paid them, what their roles in the firm were or whether they are still employed there.
If convicted, the company could be fined up to S$10,000 or S$20,000 for each charge.
This is not the first time Twelve Cupcakes has been in the spotlight over staff and salary matters.
In 2013, its then-owner and radio DJ Daniel Ong rejected allegations published on now-defunct socio-political website The Real Singapore that the firm exploited foreign workers by making them work longer hours than local employees, for low pay and with no overtime pay.
Mr Ong founded Twelve Cupcakes in 2011 with his ex-wife, Ms Jaime Teo. He and the actress divorced in 2016.
The chain was then sold to Indian tea company Dhunseri Group for S$2.5 million in January 2017.
Today, Twelve Cupcakes has 43 stores across Singapore, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Indonesia.