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 BBC NEWS
Saudi system 'abuses foreigners'
The rights of foreign workers in Saudi Arabia are being abused not only by 
employers but by the country's legal system, an advocacy group has claimed.

A report by Human Rights Watch decries what it calls the failure of the Saudi 
justice system to provide redress.

It speaks of workers who face torture, forced confessions and unfair trials 
when they are accused of crimes.

But the Saudi embassy in Washington said the report "grossly exaggerates" a few 
instances of abuse.

"The kingdom... takes the issue of human rights very seriously and we continue 
to make progress in this regard," it said in a statement.

'Slavery'

The 135-page report by the New-York based group catalogues abuses it says are 
suffered by a predominantly Asian labour force that makes up more than one 
third of the kingdom's population.

" My father, an Indian citizen, was underpaid, even though he was more 
qualified than his co-American and British workers "
Maria Frank, New York, USA
"Migrant workers in the purportedly modern society that the kingdom has become 
continue to suffer extreme forms of labour exploitation that sometimes rise to 
slavery-like conditions," it says.

It describes the case of 300 women from India, Sri Lanka and the Philippines 
who cleaned hospitals in the country's second city, Jeddah.

They worked 12-hour shifts, six days a week, and at night were locked in 
crowded dormitory-style accommodation where 14 women shared one small room.

Human Rights Watch says abuses on women are particularly disturbing.

"Some women workers that we interviewed were still traumatised from rape and 
sexual abuse at the hands of Saudi male employers," the report says.

The watchdog also recorded executions of foreign workers whose families only 
learned of the death sentence after it had been carried out.

'Self-defeating'

Saudi Arabia's labour minister recently said there were between eight and nine 
million foreign workers in the country - a much higher figure than previous 
estimates.

Most are from the Indian subcontinent and South-East Asia.

While Human Rights Watch focuses on what it considers the pressing need for 
judicial reform, the International Crisis Group (ICG) urges the country's 
ruling princes to make a much stronger commitment to political reform.

Faced with a string of attacks over the last year by radical Islamists, the 
government, it says, has been tempted to cling to the political status quo.

The ICG report calls that a self-defeating strategy.

The government needs to repair its legitimacy, which the report argues has been 
badly battered by the closed and arbitrary nature of the political system, the 
concentration of wealth and power in the hands of the ruling family, and the 
corruption and profligacy of many of its members.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/middle_east/3895357.stm

Published: 2004/07/15 14:34:19 GMT

© BBC MMX




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