http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/08/05/news/dubai.php

 

Emirates making peace with army of restive migrant workers 
By Jason DeParle


Sunday, August 5, 2007 
DUBAI: They still wake before dawn in desert dormitories that pack a dozen men 
or more to a room. They still pour concrete and tie steel rods in temperatures 
that top 43 degrees Celsius. They still spend years away from their families in 
India and Pakistan to earn about $1 an hour. They are still bonded to employers 
under terms that critics liken to indentured servitude.
But construction workers, a million strong here and famously mistreated, have 
gotten the country's attention.

After a season of unprecedented labor unrest, the government is seeking peace 
with the army of sweat-stained migrants who make local citizens a minority in 
their own country and sustain one of the world's great building booms. 
Regulators here have enforced midday sun breaks, improved health benefits, 
upgraded living conditions and cracked down on employers brazen enough to stop 
paying workers.

The result is a study of halting change in a region synonymous with foreign 
labor and, for many years, labor abuse.

Many rich countries, including the United States, rely on cheap foreign 
workers. But no country is as dependent as the United Arab Emirates, where 
guest workers make up about 85 percent of the population and 99 percent of the 
private work force.

Labor agitation came as a surprise in this city of glass towers and 
marble-tiled malls where social harmony is part of the marketing plan and 
political action can seem all but extinct. But when thousands of migrant 
construction workers walked off the job last year, blocking traffic and 
smashing parked cars, it became clear that the nonnatives were restless.

"I'm not saying we don't have a problem," said Ali bin Abdulla al-Kaabi, the 
emirates' labor minister, who was appointed by the ruling sheiks to upgrade 
standards and restore stability. "There is a problem. We're working to fix it."

Change here is constrained by rival concerns of the sort that shape the 
prospects of workers worldwide. Like many countries, only more so, the United 
Arab Emirates needs the foreign laborers but fears their numbers. The changes 
under way still leave the workers under close watch, segregated from the 
general population, with no right to unionize and no chance at citizenship.

"We want to protect the minority, which is us," Kaabi said.

Among those buffeted by recent events is Sami Yullah, a 24-year-old pipe fitter 
from Pakistan, who arrived four years ago. Like many workers, he paid nearly a 
year's salary in illegal recruiter's fees, despite laws here that require 
employers to bear all the hiring costs. In exchange, he was promised a job 
building sewer systems at a monthly salary of about $225, nearly twice what he 
earned at home.

Yullah found the work harder and more hazardous than he had expected. Two 
co-workers were killed on the job, he said, and two others injured, when they 
fell through a manhole. Conditions at the workers' camp where he lived, 
rudimentary at best, disintegrated when his employer let the water and 
electricity lapse. Then a problem even more basic arose: The company stopped 
paying the workers.

"The owner kept saying, 'Wait a minute, I will get some money,' " said Yullah, 
who joined about 400 co-workers last year in walking off the job. "He was 
taking advantage of us."

In a break with past practice, Kaabi's Labor Ministry backed the workers. 
Tapping a company bank guarantee, it restored the camp utilities and paid some 
of the back wages. It barred the company, Industrial & Engineering Enterprises, 
from hiring more workers, leading it to close its emirates operation. And it 
helped workers like Yullah, who is still owed nearly six months' back pay, find 
new jobs.

By global standards, punishing a company that does not pay its workers may seem 
modest, but Yullah recognized it as something new.

"The company cheated me," he said. "But the labor office is standing with the 
laborers."

The emirates is a rags-to-riches story on a nation-state scale. Until the 
discovery of oil in the late 1950s, there was little here but Bedouins and 
sand. To extract the oil and build a modern economy, the rulers imported a 
multinational labor force that quickly outnumbered native Arabs.

>From bankers to barbers, foreigners account for about 4.5 million of the 
>country's 5.3 million residents, according to the Ministry of Labor. About 
>two-thirds of the foreigners are South Asian, including most of the 1.2 
>million construction workers.

An ethos of tolerance has prevailed, with churches, bars and miniskirts 
co-existing with burkas. But the construction workers who build hotel rooms 
that rent for $1,000 a night and malls that sell shoes for $1,000 a pair live 
segregated lives outside of this prosperous, cosmopolitan world.

They rise before dawn in guarded camps, work six days a week at guarded sites 
and return by bus with time to do little but eat or sleep. Sonapur, a camp a 
half-hour's drive into the desert from Dubai, houses 50,000 workers and feels 
like an army base.

Building skyscrapers is inherently dangerous, especially in the heat. Until the 
government recently began insisting on summer sun breaks, one Dubai emergency 
room alone was reporting thousands of heat exhaustion cases each month.

Still, with salaries often four times and more what they can make back home, 
some workers count their blessings. Others count their debts.

"I was so eager to come to Dubai, I didn't ask questions," said Rajash Manata, 
who paid placement fees of nearly $3,800, thinking his salary would be six 
times higher than it is. "I blame myself."

Some workers simply count the days until they see their families again.

"Three years four months," said Cipathea Raghu, 37, when asked how long it had 
been since he had seen his 10-year-old daughter and 12-year-old son. "They're 
always saying, 'Daddy please, come, when will you come?' " he said.

"Tension, tension," he added, pointing to his heart.

Several years of quickening protests, mostly over unpaid wages, peaked in March 
2006, when hundreds of workers went on a rampage near the unfinished Burj 
Dubai, which is being built as the world's tallest building. Eight months 
later, Human Rights Watch, a New York advocacy group, accused the emirates of 
"cheating workers."

For a country courting tourists and investors and a free trade pact with the 
United States, the report stung. "If the U.A.E. wants to be a first-class 
global player, it can't just do it with gold faucets and Rolls-Royces," said 
Sarah Leah Whitson, Human Rights Watch's Middle East director. "It needs to 
bring up its labor standards."

Kaabi, 39, took office in late 2004 with what he describes as a mandate to do 
just that. He created the summer sun breaks, from 12:30 to 3 p.m. He pledged to 
increase the number of inspectors to 1,000 from roughly 100, though progress 
has been slow. And he publicly punished companies caught failing to pay their 
workers.

The most notable action involved Al Hamed Development & Construction, which was 
run by a well-connected sheik. After hundreds of workers blocked traffic in 
Dubai, Kaabi ordered the company to pay nearly $2 million in fines and 
temporarily froze the company's ability to hire new workers.

"A beautiful message was sent: Everybody follows the rules," Kaabi said.

Acting separately, the emirate of Abu Dhabi has strengthened health benefits 
and subsidized what is meant to be a model labor camp. Still much about the 
workers' lives remains unchanged, including the frequent need to pay high 
recruiting fees. Kaabi said that practice was hard to police, since it often 
occurred in the workers' home countries.

Unions remain off-limits. Kaabi said that allowing unions would give foreign 
labor bosses a chokehold on the economy.

"God forbid something happens between us and India and they say, 'Please, we 
want all our Indians to go home,' " he said. "Our airports would shut down, our 
streets, construction. No. I won't do this."

In July, the government ended a four-day strike at a gas processing plant by 
sending in the armed forces.

There are continuing news reports of worker suicides. Faced with complaints 
about low wages and difficult work, Kaabi repeats a point often made here: Many 
workers face greater hardships at home for less pay.

"We don't force people to come to this country," he said. "They're building a 
whole new life for their families."

But Whitson of the rights group said, "That's what exploitation is: You take 
advantage of someone's desperation."

Perched bare-chested on his bunk after a day in the sun, Sadiq Batcha, who has 
spent 18 years in camps for laborers, was of two minds about the recent 
militancy.

"People who did strikes were justified to a certain extent," he said.

At the same time, Batcha, 40, said that his monthly salary of $250 was more 
than twice what he could make back home in an Indian fishing village. He had 
built a house, given his sister a dowry of $2,500, allowing her to marry, and 
sent his children to a private, English-speaking school.

"If strikes are made legal, the company will lose money, and eventually we'll 
lose our jobs," he said.

Then with his eyes heavy at 9:30 p.m., Batcha excused himself. An alarm would 
sound in six hours, and he was eager for sleep.
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 Copyright © 2007 The International Herald Tribune | www.iht.com 

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