Source: Human Rights Watch
Dispatches: The Ugly Truth Behind the UAE’s Gleam
Rothna Begum
Amidst the turmoil of the Middle East, the United Arab Emirates
cultivates an image as a stable, center of modernity, symbolized by the
gleaming peak of Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest building.
But down on the ground, among the construction sites that pepper the
landscape, thousands of low-paid migrant workers endure the risky toil
of building the skyscrapers, monuments, and shopping malls. And even
less visible are the thousands of migrant domestic workers from Asia and
Africa who work for well-off families in their spacious homes and
luxury city apartments. Tucked away from scrutiny, these women face
myriad abuses.
Last month, a new Human Rights Watch report documented how the UAE’s kafala visa-sponsorship
system ties foreign domestic workers to individual employers, exposing
them to greater abuse and exploitation. It described how the UAE’s
denial of labor law protections opens migrant domestic workers to rights
violations by employers and others, including confiscation of
passports, 21-hour work days without rest periods, and no days off.
Domestic workers also reported that they were sometimes confined to
employers’ homes, insulted, denied food, beaten, and sometimes sexually
abused. In some cases, the abuses amounted to trafficking or forced
labor.
Tomorrow the third round of the Abu Dhabi Dialogue begins, a meeting of
Gulf and Asian countries that the UAE initiated, to discuss “best
practices” in managing labor migration to the Gulf states. Ninety
nongovernmental organizations and trade unions called on the participating countries to improve labor law protections and address abusive immigration policies and practices.
The UAE will likely tout changes such as electronic wage payment for
construction workers, and improvements to its standard contract for
domestic workers. But these reforms fall far short of those needed to ensure migrant workers’ rights.
Instead, the UAE should reform the kafala system and extend
labor law protections to all migrant workers. Otherwise, the bitter
truth will continue to tarnish its lofty, self-image.
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