http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/the-newspaper/columnists/14-rafia-zakaria-behind-the-glitz-310-zj-09


Behind the glitz 
By Rafia Zakaria 
Wednesday, 13 Jan, 2010 

 
Burj Dubai tower, the world's tallest skyscraper, is lit by laser lights during 
its opening ceremony in Dubai. Dubai opened the world's tallest structure at 
2,717 feet. -Reuters Photo 
Building towers is risky business. In fact, the very dynamics of the 
architecture of towers and their historical symbolism suggest acts of defiance. 
Dubai's Burj Khalifa, now the world's tallest building, takes the act of 
rebellion against physical limitations to new levels - literally. 



Over 100 storeys, it boasts the world's highest swimming pool and perhaps as 
expiation also the world's highest mosque. Its golf course requires over four 
million gallons of water a day. Last week, amid much fanfare, the legendary 
tower finally threw open its majestic doors to the public. 

Previously known as Burj Dubai the structure was renamed Burj Khalifa in honour 
of the Abu Dhabi ruler and UAE president who had bailed out struggling Dubai 
with a sum of billions of dollars. Envisioned and designed by a Chicago firm, 
the Burj is said to have been inspired by the vision of architect Frank Lloyd 
Wright's Sky City which was to be built in Chicago. However, it was never 
realised as it lacked both the funds and labour. Neither of these were 
seemingly a problem in the construction of the Burj which employed thousands of 
labourers from Pakistan, India and Bangladesh for several years for its 
construction. 

According to reports, the vast majority of these workers have never even been 
to the top of the building they spent years constructing. But not seeing the 
view from the top is hardly the biggest problem faced by those who constructed 
the Burj; there are allegations that many have died in the construction of the 
Burj. Such construction projects take a huge toll. Records kept by the Indian 
mission for only one year showed that nearly 1,000 Indian workers had died, 
more than 60 in accidents on the site. The Pakistani and Bangladeshi missions 
do not keep records of the many labourers who have died possibly deterred by 
the criticism of the UAE authorities. Based on estimates the total number of 
workers killed in such construction projects is believed to be well into the 
thousands. 

Days after the opening of the Burj a UAE court absolved the president's brother 
for the beating and torture - an event that was videotaped - of an Afghan grain 
merchant. Sheikh Issa Bin Zayed Al-Nahyan was recorded brutally thrashing the 
man, stuffing sand into his mouth, burning his private parts with cigarettes 
and beating him with a nailed board. The video, which is available on the 
Internet, shows the sheikh literally pouring salt on his bloody wounds. 

The court that heard the case acquitted the sheikh on the grounds that he had 
been under the influence of 'drugs'. Put simply, despite incontrovertible 
recorded evidence, the sheikh was simply too powerful to be brought to task for 
hurting a man who was in the Emirati scheme of things little more than a slave. 

The inauguration of the tower and the acquittal of the sheikh is a lurid 
juxtaposition of the hypocrisy, gluttony and crude injustice that lies beneath 
a glitzy façade. None of the innovation or glamour is indigenous; the 
architecture is American, the designers European and the slave labour South 
Asian. 

Only 10 per cent of Dubai's population is indigenous and actually has some say 
in how the emirate is run. The rest, either labourers or the educated middle 
class from Pakistan, Bangladesh and India, are only too happy to swallow their 
pride and meekly accept second-class status as gratitude for employment. The 
slave-like labourers languish in camps hapless and helpless at the hands of 
sheikhs and companies who may choose to abuse them at whim. 

In the meantime, the lurid contrast of limitless wealth and gluttonous 
consumption is seemingly lost on middle-class expatriates in Dubai. The expat 
bankers, engineers and doctors who have got work permits to escape dim 
prospects in their own countries unquestioningly consume the capitalist wealth 
of Dubai without ever contesting the injustice of their own political 
silencing. They wander in the malls, stare in veneration at the towers and 
flaunt their designer trinkets at cousins and relatives left at home as markers 
of their economic superiority. 

Never once do they ask what basis of justice allows a government to pay two 
people different amounts based on their nationality. Nor do they wonder at the 
justifications of virtual labour camps where workers toil for 18 hours a day 
and are not paid for months, conditions that would result in protest in any 
part of the developed world. Similarly, tourists from around the world visiting 
Dubai are happily duped by the fireworks, the pretty beaches and now the tall 
towers without taking a moment to question the inequity that fuels them or the 
injustice that makes them possible. 

True, injustice exists everywhere and Dubai sustains Pakistan's exported labour 
force whose remittances are crucial to the country's economic survival. But it 
must be remembered that the case of Dubai is unique. There is no place in the 
contemporary West where workers may live and work and even be born and never 
have the opportunity to participate in the governance of the country. 

Unless those who make up the expatriate labour force of the emirates are 
allowed a voice Dubai's progress will continue to be a product of exploitation 
of poverty and need. 
Indeed, if the world is revolted by reports of torture in Guantanamo, and 
campaigns to hold the US accountable, so too must it demand accountability for 
the sheikhs of Dubai without being duped by the luxurious façade of their 
towers.

The writer is an attorney and director at Amnesty International, US.
rafia.zaka...@gmail.com


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