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Bangladesh : A hub of jobless youth?

Riyad

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Educated and semi-educated all types of jobless youth have increased a lot in recent years in Bangladesh. Our people risk their life to go abroad for livelihood.


A death-defying migration

Ziauddin Choudhury
  • Published at 11:58 pm May 16th, 2019
lead-1558005516806.jpg

A journey by compulsion? / REUTERS

What causes people to take such a desperate decision?

The news of drowning in the Mediterranean of about 40 to 60 Bangladeshis recently appeared in a wide swath of the national and international press. They were reportedly illegal migrants who took off from Libya in a crammed boat that sank on the way to the European coast.

Sinking of boats or ships carrying illegal migrants in the Mediterranean is not startling news. What is startling this time is that this boat carried a cargo of humans that came from a single country -- Bangladesh.

The European coastline stretching from Italy to Greece in the Mediterranean has witnessed thousands of illegals crossing from across the other side in the past. The migrants mostly came from post-conflict countries in Africa. To this list were added migrants from countries newly launched into conflict in the Middle East. These migrants accepted death-defying dangers in vessels of all descriptions, starting from cargo ships to tramp steamers to even rubber rafts.

But they had only one goal: To reach the safety of European countries and seek asylum.

It is easy to understand why people would like to leave war-torn countries and seek asylum in safer places. It is also easy to empathize with people from poverty-stricken countries who seek a better life for themselves in more affluent countries. Therefore, it is also easy to comprehend why these people would adopt desperate ways to attain their goals.

What is not very easy to see is why this group would include people from relatively “politically stable” countries such as Bangladesh and Pakistan. Is it so difficult to live in their countries that they have to take such measures to leave their country for unknown territories?

Not too long ago, a similar news of desperate Bangladeshis getting trapped in a steamer in Bay of Bengal trying to reach Malaysia got attention because they were stranded at sea. Although many among them were Rohingya refugees, it is the Bangladeshi illegal migrants that got attention because of their number and state of health.

It was stated in a UNHCR report in 2016 that about 34,000 illegals cross the Southeast Asian seas in smuggler boats and fishing vessels yearly, a great majority of whom are Bangladeshis. Many do not make it to their destinations in Malaysia or Thailand.

But this is about those migrants or asylum seekers who get reported after a tragedy. What about the others? There are hundreds of such people who blend with other African migrants and undertake these perilous journeys for the shores of Europe or the Americas. Those who make it apply for asylum or live in sub-human conditions in crime-infested quarters of these countries, hoping that some day, they will be able to surface as lawful residents. In any case, for the great majority of these death-defying migrants, life is never normal, even if they can avoid drowning.

Unfortunately, the majority of these voluntary refugees are young people; they are not peasants who left farming in search of better occupations. They are high school-educated, many with some college education. I know, because I have met many such young people in Italy, Spain, and Portugal who had succeeded in their adventurous journeys across the seas.

What is more tragic is that these youths paid heavily for their perilous and sometimes fatal journeys to human smugglers, often spending their entire savings or selling whatever assets their parents could provide. Why do they do this?

While for some of these death-defying asylum seekers, the driver is the lure of earning “phenomenal” amounts of money (because they have been assured of this by the smugglers), for the majority of the migrants, it is unemployment. It is not uncommon in rural Bangladesh that a parent, frustrated by the continued unemployment of their children, would seek help to transport them out of the country.

I have come across instances where educated parents have approached “agents” who promise to send their wards abroad in consideration of hefty payments. They have never questioned the means or legality of the “shipping” arrangement of their wards. When demands are that many, human smugglers oblige.

We flatter ourselves by gloating over our economic miracle. Our GDP quadrupling in the last 15 years. Our growth rate being consistently ahead of neighbouring countries. Our rate of literacy growing ahead of expectation. The number of universities growing by leaps and bounds.

Yet, the rate of unemployment of educated youth is high (as high as 40% for college graduates according to a BBC report). But our planners and leaders seem to be least bothered by the alarming consequences of such unemployment.

According to a 2016 World Bank report, the overall youth unemployment rate is over 12%, with a much higher rate for college graduates. This figure is further enhanced every year, as more and more people enter the job market. And this demand for jobs cannot be met with the kind of education and skills that the job-seekers come out with.

Frustrated, they blame their country and leave for foreign shores, not realizing that the education that failed them to get a job in their own country will not get them any in another country. They are not impelled by fear of losing their lives in their country. They are impelled by a lack of suitable employment.

Our leaders need to acknowledge these incidents as a crisis -- one that has to be managed with policy and planning in education. We have allowed unabated growth in higher education without paying attention to the quality and content of this education. Our youths are trained in general education, not in skills that help agro-farming, manufacturing, technology, or health services.

There are enormous job opportunities in many sectors that do not require university degrees. It only needs introducing a curriculum in our high schools and colleges which will equip our youth with proper skills instead of handing out empty diplomas.

It is not a tall order to train our youth for jobs within the country, and not send them overseas on death-defying journeys.

Ziauddin Choudhury has worked in the higher civil service of Bangladesh early in his career, and later for the World Bank in the US.

https://www.dhakatribune.com/opinion/op-ed/2019/05/16/a-death-defying-migration
 
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as your economy, technology and awareness improves the expectations will rise exponentially
 
. . .
Simplistic article and as usual posted by a false flagging troll.

BD has an education system that does not
serve its economic needs much like its political system where the current leaders have not been elected and lacks legitimacy and moral authority.

The connection is logical....it serves the BAL scums to have a broken education system. It prevents a knowledgable polity from ever developing to challenge the one party autocracy it has established.
 
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Educated and semi-educated all types of jobless youth have increased a lot in recent years in Bangladesh. Our people risk their life to go abroad for livelihood.
You must be punished to death by hanging for saying stupid things when PDF members of BD are in unison shouting of a semi-developed industrialized BD that will mature to a fully developed economy in 2041. Ask @Black_cats, the Chief of BAL propaganda machine, about this directly.

People here claim that there are 100s of EPZs and SEZs where there are thousands of industries. Some people suffer because they are lazy to go there to seek jobs.
 
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You must be punished to death by hanging for saying stupid things when PDF members of BD are in unison shouting of a semi-developed industrialized BD that will mature to a fully developed economy in 2041. Ask @Black_cats, the Chief of BAL propaganda machine, about this directly.

People here claim that there are 100s of EPZs and SEZs where there are thousands of industries. Some people suffer because they are lazy to go there to seek jobs.

These people those who are going to Europe they are going after spending 15-20 lakh taka to these smugglers. I would say it is more of a greed those who are trying to do it.

How many extreme poor people those who really need money can afford to pay 3-5 lakh taka to go to Malaysia let alone 5-8 lakh taka require to go to Malaysia or Singapore.

Who denied finding a job is not a major problem in Bangladesh. Considering Bangladesh is a developing country it is expected in any other developing countries.

Simplistic article and as usual posted by a false flagging troll.

BD has an education system that does not
serve its economic needs much like its political system where the current leaders have not been elected and lacks legitimacy and moral authority.

The connection is logical....it serves the BAL scums to have a broken education system. It prevents a knowledgable polity from ever developing to challenge the one party autocracy it has established.

Good enough for @bluesky to start his whining.
 
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Educated and semi-educated all types of jobless youth have increased a lot in recent years in Bangladesh. Our people risk their life to go abroad for livelihood.


A death-defying migration

Ziauddin Choudhury
  • Published at 11:58 pm May 16th, 2019
lead-1558005516806.jpg

A journey by compulsion? / REUTERS

What causes people to take such a desperate decision?

The news of drowning in the Mediterranean of about 40 to 60 Bangladeshis recently appeared in a wide swath of the national and international press. They were reportedly illegal migrants who took off from Libya in a crammed boat that sank on the way to the European coast.

Sinking of boats or ships carrying illegal migrants in the Mediterranean is not startling news. What is startling this time is that this boat carried a cargo of humans that came from a single country -- Bangladesh.

The European coastline stretching from Italy to Greece in the Mediterranean has witnessed thousands of illegals crossing from across the other side in the past. The migrants mostly came from post-conflict countries in Africa. To this list were added migrants from countries newly launched into conflict in the Middle East. These migrants accepted death-defying dangers in vessels of all descriptions, starting from cargo ships to tramp steamers to even rubber rafts.

But they had only one goal: To reach the safety of European countries and seek asylum.

It is easy to understand why people would like to leave war-torn countries and seek asylum in safer places. It is also easy to empathize with people from poverty-stricken countries who seek a better life for themselves in more affluent countries. Therefore, it is also easy to comprehend why these people would adopt desperate ways to attain their goals.

What is not very easy to see is why this group would include people from relatively “politically stable” countries such as Bangladesh and Pakistan. Is it so difficult to live in their countries that they have to take such measures to leave their country for unknown territories?

Not too long ago, a similar news of desperate Bangladeshis getting trapped in a steamer in Bay of Bengal trying to reach Malaysia got attention because they were stranded at sea. Although many among them were Rohingya refugees, it is the Bangladeshi illegal migrants that got attention because of their number and state of health.

It was stated in a UNHCR report in 2016 that about 34,000 illegals cross the Southeast Asian seas in smuggler boats and fishing vessels yearly, a great majority of whom are Bangladeshis. Many do not make it to their destinations in Malaysia or Thailand.

But this is about those migrants or asylum seekers who get reported after a tragedy. What about the others? There are hundreds of such people who blend with other African migrants and undertake these perilous journeys for the shores of Europe or the Americas. Those who make it apply for asylum or live in sub-human conditions in crime-infested quarters of these countries, hoping that some day, they will be able to surface as lawful residents. In any case, for the great majority of these death-defying migrants, life is never normal, even if they can avoid drowning.

Unfortunately, the majority of these voluntary refugees are young people; they are not peasants who left farming in search of better occupations. They are high school-educated, many with some college education. I know, because I have met many such young people in Italy, Spain, and Portugal who had succeeded in their adventurous journeys across the seas.

What is more tragic is that these youths paid heavily for their perilous and sometimes fatal journeys to human smugglers, often spending their entire savings or selling whatever assets their parents could provide. Why do they do this?

While for some of these death-defying asylum seekers, the driver is the lure of earning “phenomenal” amounts of money (because they have been assured of this by the smugglers), for the majority of the migrants, it is unemployment. It is not uncommon in rural Bangladesh that a parent, frustrated by the continued unemployment of their children, would seek help to transport them out of the country.

I have come across instances where educated parents have approached “agents” who promise to send their wards abroad in consideration of hefty payments. They have never questioned the means or legality of the “shipping” arrangement of their wards. When demands are that many, human smugglers oblige.

We flatter ourselves by gloating over our economic miracle. Our GDP quadrupling in the last 15 years. Our growth rate being consistently ahead of neighbouring countries. Our rate of literacy growing ahead of expectation. The number of universities growing by leaps and bounds.

Yet, the rate of unemployment of educated youth is high (as high as 40% for college graduates according to a BBC report). But our planners and leaders seem to be least bothered by the alarming consequences of such unemployment.

According to a 2016 World Bank report, the overall youth unemployment rate is over 12%, with a much higher rate for college graduates. This figure is further enhanced every year, as more and more people enter the job market. And this demand for jobs cannot be met with the kind of education and skills that the job-seekers come out with.

Frustrated, they blame their country and leave for foreign shores, not realizing that the education that failed them to get a job in their own country will not get them any in another country. They are not impelled by fear of losing their lives in their country. They are impelled by a lack of suitable employment.

Our leaders need to acknowledge these incidents as a crisis -- one that has to be managed with policy and planning in education. We have allowed unabated growth in higher education without paying attention to the quality and content of this education. Our youths are trained in general education, not in skills that help agro-farming, manufacturing, technology, or health services.

There are enormous job opportunities in many sectors that do not require university degrees. It only needs introducing a curriculum in our high schools and colleges which will equip our youth with proper skills instead of handing out empty diplomas.

It is not a tall order to train our youth for jobs within the country, and not send them overseas on death-defying journeys.

Ziauddin Choudhury has worked in the higher civil service of Bangladesh early in his career, and later for the World Bank in the US.

https://www.dhakatribune.com/opinion/op-ed/2019/05/16/a-death-defying-migration

How many of these people knew that they will have to make this kind of journey when they spent 15-20 lakh taka and the Agent told him they will go there by flight?

Are all of these people jobless? How many even middle class people can manage 15-20 lakh taka cash like these people who tried to go to Europe?
 
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Easy solution - hang some more pro-Pak old BD folks.....
hahah so true also bashing Pakistan day n night can create jobs in Bangladesh:lol:

You must be punished to death by hanging for saying stupid things when PDF members of BD are in unison shouting of a semi-developed industrialized BD that will mature to a fully developed economy in 2041. Ask @Black_cats, the Chief of BAL propaganda machine, about this directly.

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another great solution for unemployment :cheers:
 
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Easy solution - hang some more pro-Pak old BD folks.....
Efendimiz ( sire ) sultan @Hakikat ve Hikmet , hanging someone is not solution we know. But also not hanging someone can't be solution too, and you should know sire!
When your old pro Pakistan messiahs were in power, that time unemployment was huge. Now it's reduced a lot.

However sire, I am really worried about your health now, old age made you so dull that you even forgot the method of reducing poverty.
I think you should choose an heir and appoint him as the sultan of Muslim Ummah.
Otherwise Muslim ummah( outside Bangladesh, as Bangladesh is already doomed according you sire) all other youth will be jobless soon ( because of your master mind method, of appointing certain people to improve the job market), that's why, kargalar bile guler - crows will laugh again !

Selam sire :sarcastic:
 
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8 percentage growth in GDP? resulting in drove of economy refugee? Something is missing here, why they bother using ilegal and risky means even going to Thailand and Malaysia which the economy growth only four to five percentage. And the number is large too
 
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8 percentage growth in GDP? resulting in drove of economy refugee? Something is missing here, why they bother using ilegal and risky means even going to Thailand and Malaysia which the economy growth only four to five percentage. And the number is large too

Smuggler tells them they will go genuinely but they end up like this. Each member pay 20-25k usd for Europe, 10k USD for Saudi Arabia, 5k-7k for Malaysia and Singapore. They think they will be millionaire by going abroad. Indeed some has become rich and hearing their story many become desperate to go abroad and face this kind of situation. Sometime even worse, the smugglers abduct them and ask for more money.

Government has finally started to crack down on these smugglers and travel agencies involved in it.
 
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Smuggler tells them they will go genuinely but they end up like this. Each member pay 20-25k usd for Europe, 10k USD for Saudi Arabia, 5k-7k for Malaysia and Singapore. They think they will be millionaire by going abroad. Indeed some has become rich and hearing their story many become desperate to go abroad and face this kind of situation. Sometime even worse, the smugglers abduct them and ask for more money.

Government has finally started to crack down on these smugglers and travel agencies involved in it.

Smugglers are one of the main causes of this trend. Young men are roped in with tales of success in foreign lands.
And there are many success stories of migrant workers in the gulf and southeast asia who returned rich, became more rich than other educated and qualified people. However, these migrant workers usually go through government or trusted agencies.

Usually the smugglers dump them in some other countries and the men have no choice but to work their way out to pay their debt.

From personal experience many of the men are educated but their degree/diploma are not that valued. They see their peers with same educational level but from more well known institutions getting better jobs and life and they become more desperate. The smugglers prey on this desperation.

This is the same story with other south asian nations as well. With rising population there is a pressure for job growth, but south asian nations have this "salary man" culture, not enough entrepreneurship, which is required for new business to take hold and jobs to be created.
 
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Smugglers are one of the main causes of this trend. Young men are roped in with tales of success in foreign lands.
And there are many success stories of migrant workers in the gulf and southeast asia who returned rich, became more rich than other educated and qualified people. However, these migrant workers usually go through government or trusted agencies.

Usually the smugglers dump them in some other countries and the men have no choice but to work their way out to pay their debt.

From personal experience many of the men are educated but their degree/diploma are not that valued. They see their peers with same educational level but from more well known institutions getting better jobs and life and they become more desperate. The smugglers prey on this desperation.

This is the same story with other south asian nations as well. With rising population there is a pressure for job growth, but south asian nations have this "salary man" culture, not enough entrepreneurship, which is required for new business to take hold and jobs to be created.

But find out how @bluesky will spin this obvious fact. I feel sorry for those guys but it is greed who has led them to this situation.
 
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8 percentage growth in GDP? resulting in drove of economy refugee? Something is missing here, why they bother using ilegal and risky means even going to Thailand and Malaysia which the economy growth only four to five percentage. And the number is large too
By the information you gave above, people from Malaysia and Thailand should cross the shark-infested Indian Ocean to the shore of scorching BD, the great homeland of @Black_cats, to get employment in the industries we have built. I wonder, why this simple thing is not happening and why rather people from BD go abroad by risking their lives?
 
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