CAFOD’s local partner, Ovibashi Karmi Unnayan Program (OKUP), presses the Bangladeshi government as well as the authorities in destination countries to support migrant workers, and helps returned migrants to claim compensation when their rights have been violated.
In July OKUP organised a national consultation in the capital, Dhaka, on ways to gain justice for migrant workers who suffer abuse, and to launch a report examining the cases of 114 returned migrant workers who filed complaints through the arbitration system.
The report, A far cry from justice for migrants, found four-fifths of the male migrants interviewed were recruited through unauthorised agents. None received regular salaries, nearly half did not receive work permits and only a quarter got jobs, usually in a sector different to what they had been promised. None received basic rights.
One man who migrated to Saudi Arabia said:
“I was given a job as a labourer on a construction site in a desert. I had to work more than 10 hours a day under the scorching sun. I couldn’t drink enough water, because there were no good facilities. I was accommodated in a camp with 3,000 workers – one room for six or seven people, and one toilet for 100 people.”
Female domestic workers who filed complaints revealed that more than nine in 10 had suffered physical or mental torture, and were denied healthcare. Nearly half were victims of sexual exploitation. Working from dawn to midnight with no rest or holidays was the norm, and four-fifths did not receive regular salaries.
One domestic worker said:
“They used to beat me and torture me often for little mistakes. One day, they had a party at night. I roasted chicken for them. It was midnight, and I got tired from doing all the work from dawn. So I felt dizzy. I cannot remember how long my eyes were closed, but I jumped up screaming. My madam had taken a burning coal from the oven and pressed it on my arm.”