Bangladesh

Among the joyful family reunions at the arrivals gate at Dhakas international airport, one group of travellers stands out.
These men appear gaunt and dazed, most of them carrying nothing but a thin blanket they picked up on the plane.
They weartracksuits and blue rubber sandals or shoes without laces.
Some walk barefoot.All have just been deported from Saudi Arabia, and each day they arrive by the planeload.
Nearly 70,000 Bangladeshi migrant workers were deported from the Gulf kingdom in 2022, mostly for not having a valid residence permit,known as an iqama.They return from one of the wealthiest countries in the world, hungry, traumatised and withouteven the money to buy a bus ticket home.The only thing the men do bring back are horrific stories of abuse, false contracts and wage theft that tumble angrily out of them.
One man, Amir Hossein, says he paid recruitment agents 400,000 taka (2,860) to get to Saudi Arabia, but has been sent home after just over a year, during which he worked for nine months without payment.Another man says: I was told I would work in a restaurant in a five-star hotel but ended up in a tea stall.
A third says he worked for three months but was only paidonemonths salary.
Ive lost all my money, he says.Saudi Arabia will rely on tens of thousands of low-wage labourers such as these to deliver its dream of hosting the 2034 World Cup.
The pipeline of workers from Bangladesh to Saudi Arabia is expected to increase dramatically if the country is anointed host by Fifa, as expected this year.View image in fullscreenThe scene at Dhakas international airport, where more and more deported migrants are now found among the business travellers and reunited familiesThe workers allegations of abuse at the hands of their Saudi employers should be a red flag to Fifa, which was heavily criticised for the severe abuse endured by many migrant workers in the leadup to the 2022 tournament in Qatar.Human rights groups are warning that if Saudi Arabia does not make drastic efforts to stop the abuse of migrant workers, which is already widespread in the Gulf kingdom, another World Cup tournament could be tainted with suffering and exploitation.My boss cancelled my papers without telling me.
He told the police to send me back.
He owed me six months wagesMohammed RohmotullahBangladeshi labourers are not usually to blame for failing to have the correct residency papers.
Many arriving back in Bangladesh claim their employer or sponsor failed to obtain or renew their iqama document, which they need to legally live and work, after they arrived in Saudi Arabia.My boss cancelled my iqama without telling me, says Mohammed Rohmotullah, who had worked in Saudi Arabia for three and a half years.
When the police caught me, they called him and he told them to send me back.
He owed me six months wages.View image in fullscreenShahabuddin, one of the returning migrants at Dhaka airport, says he was deported despite having valid papersOthers say their iqama was still valid but they were deported regardless.
I asked them: why areyou arresting me? says a deportee named Shahabuddin.
They told me to shut up.Amnesty International says the situation for migrant workers in Saudi Arabia is bleak, and that they [continue] to be abused andexploited under the sponsorship system thousands arbitrarily detained in inhumane conditions, tortured and otherwise ill-treated, and involuntarily returned to their home.Despite the Gulf kingdom announcing it had abolished the kafala system under which workers are tied to their employer, Ali Mohamed, Arabic editor of migrant-rights.org says employerswield the power to revoke or not renew work permits and can file absconding charges, rendering workers irregular and liable to deportation.Prioritising the arrest and deportation of migrants over holding employers to account reinforces the perception that the Saudi authorities regard migrants merely as exploitable and disposable labour, he says.The workers interviewed by the Guardian say they were rounded up on the streets or picked up while eating breakfast and taken directly to a detention centre, where they were typically held for one to two weeks before being sent straight home.Conditions in detention centres vary, but some men allege they were kept in huge overcrowded cells where 250 to 300 men slept two to a single bed or on the floor.
There were no showers, little food and no chance to appeal, they claim.
The conditions were miserable.
Ive never seen such a place in my life, says Rohmotullah, who was locked up for 16 days.View image in fullscreenA pair of the blue plastic sandals issued at Saudi detention centres, where migrant workers say they were held in appalling conditionsThe consequences of being deported are particularly dire for Bangladeshis.
Almost all migrant workers must pay extortionate fees to recruitment agents for their jobs in the Gulf, but Bangladeshis are charged by far the highest rates.
Many are forced home before they can pay off the cost of their recruitment.


One of the last to emerge at Dhaka airport is 65yearold Sabir Ahmed, who spent 26 years in Saudi Arabia.
He carries a small rucksack but there is nothing in it.
He does not even havethe money for the bus home.
My family will have to pay the busfare when I reach there, he says, before heading off, his emptybag over his shoulder.
It is all he has to show for almost three decades in Saudi Arabia.In a statement, Saudi Arabias Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development said the country only repatriates those proven to have violated the work and residency regulations in the kingdom after taking all legal measures to verify their violations and coordinating with the embassies of their countries.Detention centres meet the highest international standards and ensure workers rights to healthcare, nutrition and a clean and safe environment, as well as the right to appeal, the statementsaid.Staff from workers embassies have the right to visit detention centres, and the Saudi human rights commission, makes routine visits to assess the integrity of all procedures and ensure that the appropriate laws and regulations related to human rights are adhered to, the statement added.Fifa and the Bangladesh government did not respond to multiple requests for comment..
This article first appeared/also appeared in theguardian.com 





Unlimited Portal Access + Monthly Magazine - 12 issues


Contribute US to Start Broadcasting - It's Voluntary!


ADVERTISE


Merchandise (Peace Series)

 


‘Many migrant workers will die’: the likely human cost of awarding the 2034 World Cup to Saudi Arabia