The harsh reality is that we have demanded an end to slavery and the Middle East in particular, but also less so elsewhere, have chosen to write in the laws and have then paid lip service to any form of proactive enforcement and actual protection of human rights.
This will end when poverty itself
is ended and that is not too far away either. In the meantime human
exploitation abounds and far beyound the numbers I ever imagined.
What I find bizarre is the sense
of entitlement that pervades the Arab world in particular. It can
change, but only with hard mesures that includes separating families
and extensive reeducation. Tghis will be expensive.
Slavery’s
modern face in the Middle East
Robert
Fulford August 16, 2014
The
world doesn’t need more reasons to be angry at the governments of
the Middle East, but the West should nevertheless know about their
cruel treatment of labour. When we deal with these states, we should
understand the meanness that lies deep in their societies —
beginning with how they construct their gleaming buildings and how
they treat their maids and nannies.
Much
of the manual labour in these countries, and much of the domestic
work, is performed by people who in the 19th century were known as
indentured bond-slaves or coolies. The British Empire abolished
slavery in the 1830s, the U.S. in the 1860s, but in 2014 much of the
Middle East treats foreign workers as slaves. This week a journalist
in Nepal wrote that “the kafala system keeps hundreds of thousands
of Nepali in slave labour conditions.” It is widely accepted —
and the more you learn about it, the worse it looks.
Kafala
is a system that governs construction and domestic migrant labourers
in Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and the Gulf States. When workers
arrive, they must immediately surrender their passports to their
employers. In
Saudi Arabia that applies as well to professionals, such as doctors.
From
that point on, their
rights resemble those of illegally imported prostitutes from Eastern
Europe.
Companies spend money to recruit workers, and claim that holding
their passports guarantees they’ll fulfill their obligations. But
Human Rights Watch says the system gives employers so much control
that some of them force domestic workers to continue working against
their will and prevent them from returning to their home countries.
HRW believes that the
kafala system makes some Saudi Arabians believe they have purchased
“ownership.”
Andrew
Gardner, an anthropologist at the University of Puget Sound and a
specialist in Gulf States migration, notes that many migrants
are simply not paid the wages promised to them. So they “abscond”
from the only job they are legally allowed to hold and try to find
something else. That makes them “illegals” under kafala rules,
and they become targets of the police.
Gardner says, “This is a vicious circle that I’ve been observing
for over a decade.”
The
secretary of the International Trade Union Confederation, Sharan
Burrow, has said that the Gulf States have the most regressive labour
relations. The employer decides when a worker can get a driver’s
licence, rent a home, open a bank account or leave the country.
Amnesty International reports some workers are so desperate to get
back their passports that they sign false statements that they have
received their wages. Nasser Beydoun, an Arab-American businessman
from Detroit, went to Qatar to open a chain of restaurants and ended
up writing a book, The Glass Palace: Illusions of Freedom and
Democracy in Qatar, published in 2012. He said, “Foreign workers in
Qatar are modern-day slaves to their local employers. The local
Qatari owns you.”
The
award of the 2022 World Cup has focused international attention on
Qatar’s abusive labour practices, but there’s no sign it has
improved them. For several months a cluster of international artists
(including figures such as Janet Cardiff and Krzysztof Wodiczko) have
been boycotting the Guggenheim Museum because of inhuman labour
conditions in Abu Dhabi, where a new Guggenheim is going up. “Workers
can’t come and go at will,” says an organizer of the boycott.
“It’s like a prison.” They believe the scandal threatens to
sully the Guggenheim’s reputation, but no plans to reform the
operation in Abu Dhabi have been reported.
A
sense of entitlement governs many Middle East employers. They feel
they deserve to have their work done at rock-bottom prices by
otherwise indigent foreigners.
This attitude emerged clearly when the Insan Association, a human
rights NGO in Lebanon, persuaded 250 employers of domestic workers to
be interviewed.
Many
of the respondents clearly lack the skills to manage others. When a
problem arises, one employer said, “I solve the problem cordially.
Sometimes I threaten her to go to the Employment Agency and sometimes
I deduct from her salary.” Another said, “I call the agency and
they give me tips like, ‘Threaten her with sending her back to
Ethiopia.'”
Migrant
domestics apparently make their employers uneasy. There are employers
who don’t like their nannies to have separate lives. Some forbid
them to leave the house, even on their breaks. As elsewhere,
employers retain the passports.
The
most striking fact in this little survey dealt with the kafala system
itself. More than half the respondents said it should be changed.
They felt it was simply too burdensome for employers.
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