http://www.dawn.com/2010/11/24/slavery-in-our-times.html


Slavery in our times
Irfan Husain 
November 24, 2010 
Irfan Husain 
Among the many daily tragedies blighting the lives of Asian migrant workers in 
the Middle East is the harassment, physical abuse and cruelty they have to put 
up with if they want to stay. A recent issue of Sri Lanka's Daily Mirror 
informed us that more than 300 Sri Lankan women workers had left Bahrain over 
the last six months, complaining of "physical abuse, sexual harassment, 
non-payment of salaries and being over-worked".

According to Mr Higgoda, Sri Lanka's honorary consul to Bahrain, "We are 
handling many cases where the maids are assaulted by employers. Some were not 
paid for months and some were denied medial care, enough food or the right to 
go home, and also faced violence and harassment. If the maids want to leave 
their work and complain to the police, they are called runaways by their 
employers. As a result, the victim is usually deported, after serving time in 
custody."

An extreme case of this nature is that of Ms Sumiati Binti Salan Mustapa, a 
23-year old Indonesian worker in Saudi Arabia, who was recently hospitalised 
after her face and mouth were savagely cut with scissors, and her body burned 
with a hot iron. Just seeing her slashed face is enough to give you nightmares. 
To the best of my knowledge, her Saudi employers - the people responsible for 
the attack - are still free, despite the government's assurances to the 
Indonesian authorities of its intentions to investigate the assault.

One reason Saudi employers get away with this routine mistreatment of foreign 
employees is that despite the terrible conditions many of them are forced to 
endure, many Asians are still willing to come to the kingdom. Currently, around 
80,000 Indonesians flock to Saudi Arabia every year. And yet, talking about the 
attack on Ms Mustapa, the Indonesian foreign minister said: "Everyone knows 
about these abuse cases, they happen all the time."

But both the employees and their governments are desperate for the remittances 
they send back home. Hence the conspiracy of silence. According to Human Rights 
Watch, many Asian domestic workers suffer "conditions of slavery". Saudi Arabia 
alone has some 8.8 million foreign workers, most of them from India, Pakistan, 
Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Indonesia. This works out to two foreign workers for 
every Saudi.

Despite the appalling conditions they work under, and the duration of their 
stay, none of these unfortunate people ever acquire citizenship rights. They 
are thus vulnerable to constant abuse with virtually no laws to protect them. 
Ignored by the police and their own governments, they fear deportation if they 
leave their employers.

This pattern is repeated across the Middle East with hundreds of cases of abuse 
being reported throughout the region. Dubai built its skyscrapers on the backs 
of tens of thousands of brutally exploited South Asian construction workers, 
and yet they have remained invisible to the shoppers who flock to this island 
of glitz and fool's gold.

Then there was the scandal of child jockeys from Pakistan - some as young as 
five and six - who were tied on to racing camels.

Many fell to their deaths, and others were crippled for life. It took years of 
international outrage to persuade the UAE government to ban this disgusting 
practice. Successive Pakistani governments remained silent spectators to this 
crime.

Migrant workers are exploited all over the world as mostly, they work in a grey 
area with few rights and little protection. But nowhere is the abuse as 
flagrant as in the Middle East. Because few employers responsible for 
assaulting their staff are ever prosecuted, most citizens feel they can torture 
those they employ with impunity. States exporting this labour do not want to 
upset the host countries by demanding a proper enquiry and prosecution as they 
want to keep the petro dollars flowing into their coffers.

Had Asian workers been subjected to the same kind of abuse in the West as they 
are in the Middle East, the media and civil society groups would have been up 
in arms. As it is, millions of migrant workers have become citizens of the 
Western countries they live and work in. They and their families now benefit 
from all the advantages of being in welfare societies with free education and 
medical care and, above all, protection of the law.

What causes this widespread abuse of the weak in so many countries in the 
Middle East? Clearly, their seems to be a deep contempt for those not of Arab 
descent. And while Westerners are given favoured status, other non-Arabs are 
subjected to the worst kind of racism. This despite our loud proclamations of 
the equality that supposedly exists in Islamic societies.These double standards 
are common knowledge, and yet few in our part of the world are willing to speak 
about it. The racism inherent in the situation has its roots in the early days 
of Islam. Tarek Fatah, the Pakistani-Canadian intellectual, has quoted Maulana 
Maudoodi, the founder of the Jamat-i-Islami, in his ground-breaking book 
Chasing a Mirage:

"Right from the start, the Umayyad government took on the colours of an Arab 
government in which the equality of the Arabs and non-Arabs was negated. In 
clear violation of Islamic principles, the Arab rulers imposed Jazia on 
non-Arab Muslims. Non-Arab Muslims felt that they were the slaves of the Arabs."

Fatah also quotes Professor Liyakat Takim of the University of Denver:

"(Under the Umayyads between 661 and 750) Arab Muslims were granted honorific 
status relegating, in the process, non-Arabs to a status of second class 
citizens. Despite the Quranic injunction of egalitarianism, Arab sense of pride 
in Arab identity reasserted itself soon after the Prophet's (PBUH) death. 
Non-Arab converts to Islam, whatever their previous social status, were treated 
as second-class citizens."

And if this is their attitude towards non-Arab Muslims, imagine how they must 
feel about non-Muslim Asians. Clearly, this racist mindset has only grown 
stronger over time. Now, with egos bloated with billions of dollars in newly 
acquired unearned wealth derived from an accident of geology, many in the 
Middle East feel they are chosen above all others, and can mistreat those less 
fortunate than them.

Until states exporting surplus workers to the region begin to assert their 
rights, this modern version of slavery will continue.

irfan.hus...@gmail.com


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