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Foreign
labourers fume over conditions in Dubai
DUBAI—Beyond the gleaming towers, busy highways and luxury villas of
Dubai, hundreds of thousands of South Asian labourers who helped build
them live in cramped and dusty industrial zones.
Frustrated by low wages and long hours, construction workers in the Gulf
Arab trade hub have long complained about the poor working conditions
that lie behind Dubai’s spectacular building boom. This week, those
protests turned violent.
“They turned over police cars, and the police showed up and they created
problems with them,” said an Egyptian labourer who declined to give his
name.
“They are asking for higher wages... They stopped working suddenly. They
stopped cars. The police arrived to stop them from closing down the road
and (they) assaulted the police. The police besieged the camp, and
picked up ... workers and (charged them).”
The Gulf News daily reported on Thursday that of some 5,000 workers were
rounded up during the protests on Saturday, some 800 were still in
custody. It quoted the police chief, Dahi Khalfan Tamim, as saying that
workers involved in vandalising police vehicles and public property
would be prosecuted.
Dubai, one of seven emirates in the United Arab Emirates, has long faced
criticism from international human rights groups who say it turns a
blind eye to the non-payment of wages, lack of medical care and
sub-standard housing for workers.
Foreigners, including labourers and middle and high-income executives,
comprise over 85 percent of the UAE’s 4 million population.
Labourers in coloured overalls can be seen toiling on the construction
sites that dot Dubai, which has used cash from record oil prices to
build ambitious developments including the world’s tallest building and
three palm-shaped islands as well as a man-made archipelago shaped like
a map of the world.
The government has revised the labour law in recent months to include
requirements that employers pay for migrant workers’ travel, employment
permits, medical tests and health care.
The government has also closed down some workers’ camps that do not meet
minimal health and safety standards in an effort to crack down on
companies that abuse migrant workers.
But in March, New York-based watchdog Human Rights Watch said a UAE
draft labour law fell far short of international standards for the
rights of workers.
“The problem was the salary, because our salary (is) not very much,” one
Pakistani labourer said in broken English. “Not much ... maybe one ...
hundred (dollars). So, this is a big problem.” Some problems begin in
the workers’ home countries, where they are recruited with false
promises of good pay to send home.
Many are illiterate and cannot read the contracts they sign before they
go. In Dubai, many labourers end up living in crowded rooms they share
in camps run by their employers. Some have their passports held by
employers to stop them running away.—Agencies
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