What's new

'Saudi threatened to send back Pakistanis, reemploy Bangladeshis instead' Turkish President Erdogan

lol ,,,,,, Don't get excited , Don't waist your energy on jumping with joy …… If KSA and UAE use this card against PAKISTAN , Then what stop them to use same card against BD ?????
You guys will suffer more then us …….
And one more important question , Why BD didn't attended this summit ?

I really hope they pull this card on us and actually kick out all Bangladeshi workers from all GCC countries. I want an end to this culture of sending labour to middle east but it seems our fvcken government won't do it. So it's better that they do it.

it is a thread based on a lie by erdogan! they simply can't replace Pakistani defense workers and soldiers overnight with bongs (just too many to train and replace it will cost and take years). and their relationship with injuns is not related to defense matters but business so they are out.

Based on lie by Erdogan? He is a heavyweight leader in the Islamic world and Turkey has great relationship with Pakistan. Why would he lie about something that can be insulting or potentially humiliating to Pakistan when Pakistan is a all time friend of Turkey? Makes no sense.
 
.
Sounds like you idolize Saudi so much you can’t even see that they don’t give a shit about you.

Some one does not need to be on any one side to accepts facts on the ground. India, Pakistan and BD cam not ignore Gulf for ignore for economic reason irrespective of i idoloze them or not..
 
.
I really hope they pull this card on us and actually kick out all Bangladeshi workers from all GCC countries. I want an end to this culture of sending labour to middle east but it seems our fvcken government won't do it. So it's better that they do it.
How many millions BDeshi are in GCC ? How many people(families members) they are supporting/feeding. How much money they are sending back home ? And how that money is good for BD economy ? What will you(BD , Govt of BD) will do when they all come back home ?
Zero income , millions jobless people , millions to feed ……. Think logically , Only because of this BD stayed away from this summit…….
 
.
Indians already number in majority among expats in GCC

That should not mean we should relax. I hope government is actively working to find more opportunities for the Indians.

India's serial number is far behind BD. BD has sent 1800 military personnel to clear the landmine fields near the Yemen border and has promised to send fighting troops if Mecca and Medina are under attack.

KSA is supposed to reciprocate these BD gestures. However, I would like the Pakistani workforce to remain there as it is and the Pakistan govt should take care to keep them there. Not to infuriate the KSA.

Of course Bangladesh has an upper hand being a fellow Islamic country but Indian government could also offer Muslim personnel who are part of the Indian Army.

Go get it. If it is like that then we don't want that. Saudia doesn't give us anything for free. They know it very well. We have other fronts for us now and if we picked up our hands from the gulf countries security, that will be disaster for them.

Well Saudis are entitled to make that decision. India could only try and should definitely put all the effort to make a case for India.
 
. . .
GCC have right to stop Pakistan cuz we always show our weak points that how fragile we become. Strong your economy so you can equally stand on your stance no one is listening to Pak but why india they chose over Pak when we call them ummah?
Cuz india muniplate things smartly they interfer with plan our embassies do nothing for communities they are just their like on tour or somthing.
 
.
I really hope they pull this card on us and actually kick out all Bangladeshi workers from all GCC countries. I want an end to this culture of sending labour to middle east but it seems our fvcken government won't do it. So it's better that they do it.
What reasons do you have for wishing the expulsion of BD people from the ME? Do you really want their families to die of starvation? Comments should be logical. Please do not wish like a vulture while you yourself are living and working in a foreign country.
 
.
What reasons do you have for wishing the expulsion of BD people from the ME? Do you really want their families to die of starvation? Comments should be logical. Please do not wish like a vulture while you yourself are living and working in a foreign country.
I really hope they pull this card on us and actually kick out all Bangladeshi workers from all GCC countries. I want an end to this culture of sending labour to middle east but it seems our fvcken government won't do it. So it's better that they do it.



Based on lie by Erdogan? He is a heavyweight leader in the Islamic world and Turkey has great relationship with Pakistan. Why would he lie about something that can be insulting or potentially humiliating to Pakistan when Pakistan is a all time friend of Turkey? Makes no sense.


In all honesty BD needs its man power export be it in GCC, malaysia or elsewhere.

We are not there yet in becoming self sufficient in generating new jobs in line with the number of ppl entering the job market.

If suddenly GCC closes for BD workers it would be a catastrophic.

BD needs to up its game it terms of educating and training its people although without doubt it is happening.

BD absolutely needs to capture manufacturing opportunities as countries like China move up the value chain.

BD already has a huge IT freelance workforce who service the world... may this development continue.

In terms of what Erdogan said personally I believe him. Without doubt Pakistan was not expecting the Saudi reaction.

Personally it is high time to ditch OIC, well perhaps not ditch it but sideline it somewhat. Democratic nations and autocratic nations can not really achieve anything and OIC policy and strategic paralysis will continue ad infinitum.

Democratic muslim nations such as BD, Pakistan, Indonesia, Turkey, malaysia, nigeria and Iran should pursue the creation of a separate non arab muslim entity.
 
.
how would pakistan's future looks like as a Chinese province? i think it will transform the landmass into a whole new level
 
.
Simply because malaysia on its own is unable to influence asean from its course of supporting the monkeys.

BD has excellent relationship with Malaysia, turkey as well as the GCC. It simply did not join as we could not see how it would have benefited us. Our economy needs the GCC block but strategically we are more aligned to turkey. There was absolutely no advantage to BD in taking a position that ends up alienating someone else.

Materially different from pakistan who accepted and then pulled out. Your diplomacy is immature and over estimates your capabilities.

BD understands its limitations and works within it to further our interest.

How is BD strategically more aligned with Turkey? Why not Indonesia, Malayasia, GCC or West. Somehow by strategical alignment with Turkey, you see BD a satellite caliphate state of Europe's new sick man; the self entitled Sultan of Turkey?
 
.
How many millions BDeshi are in GCC ? How many people(families members) they are supporting/feeding. How much money they are sending back home ? And how that money is good for BD economy ? What will you(BD , Govt of BD) will do when they all come back home ?
Zero income , millions jobless people , millions to feed ……. Think logically , Only because of this BD stayed away from this summit…….

I don't know the exact number but it is surely a big number.

I don't want our people to work under inhuman conditions. We also have people in other countries where the conditions are much better. I know pulling them out will have an impact but because of taking the middle eastern labor market for granted our government does not have motivation and drive to improve the economy to employ our people in the country. It's a viscous cycle and it should stop.
 
.
How is BD strategically more aligned with Turkey? Why not Indonesia, Malayasia, GCC or West. Somehow by strategical alignment with Turkey, you see BD a satellite caliphate state of Europe's new sick man; the self entitled Sultan of Turkey?

Turkey is a democracy.... seeking to forge an independent path.... hence the alignment. Militarily we are engaging more and more with them.

Economically for us GCC more important as we have negligible enonomic relation with turkey.

Malaysia and indonesia do not have a global philosophy as such but as democracies our natural allies.

Absence of BD from the KL meet is simply because BD wants to maintain good relationship with all.

Muslim democracies are our natural allies more that arab monarchies or military dictatorships.

I do not share your assessment of turkey.
 
Last edited:
.
Where are Europe’s illegal migrants coming from? Surprise: It’s Bangladesh.
By Nayma Qayum

imrs.php

A rescuer with the Malta-based NGO Migrant Offshore Aid Station carries a migrant baby rescued from a wooden boat in the central Mediterranean Sea off the coast of Libya on April 15. (Darrin Zammit Lupi/Reuters)


What country are most of Europe’s illegal migrants coming from? You might think Syria or some other war-torn nation. You would be wrong. According to the International Organization for Migration, the top “sending” country is a democracy that claims to have made strides in human development: Bangladesh.

Bangladeshi migrants are paying between $8,000 and $9,000 just to get to Libya, and an additional $700 for an uncertain passage across the Mediterranean to Italy.

The vast majority are looking for work — and migrant work has always been risky. Thousands of Bangladeshi workers have died working in Middle Eastern countries. More than 8,000 bodies were returned to Bangladesh from 2004 to 2009, out of roughly 3.7 million Bangladeshi workers in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Oman in 2009. Employers often subject workers to inhumane working conditions and hold them hostage by confiscating their passports.

These migrant workers are trapped in foreign countries, unable to return home.
For many Bangladeshis, migration is one of the few paths to upward mobility. Although the country has reduced poverty from 44.2 percent in 1991 to 18.5 percent in 2010, that’s still a lot of people. What’s more, the nation faces massive structural challenges: a large population of 164.8 million, of which roughly 34 percent live in urban centers; floodwaters, rising sea levels and encroaching salt water pushing people out of coastal areas and into densely populated cities; and a high graduate unemployment rate.
With the job market saturated, many young men and women seek employment abroad. Fully 5.5 percent of Bangladesh’s population is international migrant workers. Four out of their top five destinations are in the Middle East — Oman, Qatar, UAE and Bahrain. Harsh working conditions have now pushed their movement to Europe, and in particular, Italy. In Rome, Bangladeshis run mini-marts and work as street vendors, and have established themselves in local communities. They even run their own community organizations.

According to the World Bank, those migrants send home billions of U.S. dollars, a large boost to the country’s economic development at home.

imrs.php

Bangladesh: Personal remittances in millions of U.S. dollars (1976-2014 <br/> Source: World Development Indicators)
Bangladesh has a long history of migration. After independence in 1971, rising domestic unemployment and the gulf’s need for oil field workers prompted mass migration to Middle Eastern countries. Working in Saudi Arabia or Dubai became many a young person’s dream. These stints — often on temporary contracts — created a path to higher economic and social status. Because families of migrants tended to be wealthier, migrant work was seen as a marker of success.
Migrant recruitment — particularly of poor and unskilled workers — grew into a massive industry riddled with illegal and violent practices. Recruiters form a vast network within and between the sending and receiving countries and charge high fees for their services. The cost of going to work in the Middle East is 4.5 times higher in Bangladesh than in the Philippines or Sri Lanka, and in Bangladesh, almost 60 percent of the money goes to intermediaries, 18 percent to helpers, and an additional 10 percent to recruitment agencies.
Saudi Arabia is no longer taking Bangladeshi workers in great numbers. Although the country lifted a six-year ban on Bangladeshi workers in 2016, this is unlikely to increase recruitment because falling oil prices have left tens of thousands of workers — mainly Indians — unemployed and starving there. Others are returning from conflict-ridden Middle Eastern countries. More than 36,000 workers returned from Libya alone since the uprising against Moammar Gaddafi began in 2011. A variety of human rights organizations have called attention to worker exploitation and abuse.
And so, since the fall of Gaddafi, Libya has become the gateway to Europe for many countries’ refugees and migrants willing to risk the dangerous journey across the Mediterranean — including 2,800 Bangladeshis who arrived in Italy this year.
Illegal migration to Europe is not new for Bangladeshis. In 2015, the Libyan government banned the entry of Bangladeshi workers, claiming that many were trying to travel to Europe. Others who had traveled to Europe illegally were sent back to Bangladesh. But Libya’s fragile political situation may have opened up new trafficking opportunities across the Mediterranean. More and more Bangladeshis are now attempting this passage.
At home, political and economic crises are motivating young people to migrate. Bangladesh has one of the highest unemployment rates in South Asia, despite steady economic growth, unemployment likely fueled by high inflation and increasing population. A World Bank report estimated that in 2013, about 41 percent of Bangladeshi youths were not employed or in education or training, and the portion of young unemployed people was 78 percent.
Skilled workers can only get government jobs if they have a patron; private companies often hire only students from elite universities. And higher education itself can be corrupt, with students often unable to get into schools and universities without bribes or political connections.
Unskilled workers tend to work on temporary contracts in agriculture, transportation or construction in the cities. Most come from the villages. While nongovernmental organizations have entered the rural scenes with scores of development programs targeting women, they leave the men behind. Political violence, lawlessness and crackdowns on the opposition make life all the more uncertain.

What’s more, Bangladesh’s once-booming ready-made garment industry — which has contributed significantly to economic growth and employment — has seen retailers pulling out because of dangerous working conditions and political violence. In 2013, 1,137 people died when the Rana Plaza factory collapsed. Bangladesh’s factories have yet to comply with the renovations that global retailers demanded after that. Recently, five big clothing brands have pulled out of a major garment industry summit after hundreds of workers were dismissed over demands for better pay. With the garment industry suffering, thousands of workers are looking for other jobs.
More than 1,000 migrants have died this year in the passage from Libya to Italy. They are not only trying to escape conflict and persecution but also risking their lives and savings to flee poverty and economic desperation. Whether European countries will welcome them remains to be seen.

Nayma Qayum is an assistant professor in Asian studies at Manhattanville College. Find her on twitter @naymaqayum.

First thing has anyone put forward any wrong statistics? Has anyone said anything until idiot like @doorstar started saying things against Bangladesh?

Bangladeshis going to India is a propaganda, west is first world country so Bangladeshis are going for better life like any other country's people, same is for Europe as well but those who are going spending around 20 lakh taka or more for that and no one goes to south america but it is a latest trend that few individuals were taking the route of South America to enter USA.
Chasing the Dubai Dream in Italy: Bangladeshi Migration to Europe
FEATURE
By Nayma Qayum

BangladeshiWorkers-SebDech-Flickr.jpg

Bangladeshi migrant workers listen to instructions at a camp near the border of Tunisia and Libya. (Photo: SebDech/Flickr)

In 2017, Bangladeshis suddenly emerged as one of the top migrant groups taking a perilous journey across the Mediterranean to reach European shores, along a route more traditionally frequented by sub-Saharan Africans. More than 8,700 Bangladeshis arrived in Italy by sea between January and August 2017, comprising roughly 9 percent of all maritime arrivals and ranking behind only Nigerians and Guineans, according to the International Organization for Migration (IOM). Most brave this often-deadly journey in search of work, their migration paved by a complex set of factors at origin.

For several decades, Bangladeshis unable to find jobs amid uneven development at home have set out to work in countries that need their labor, primarily in the oil-rich Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) region. But increasingly, brutal working conditions combined with an economic slowdown and restrictive government policies toward migrant workers in the GCC are leading some to reroute their Dubai Dream to Europe—though the numbers heading there remain a fraction of overall Bangladeshi emigration. Most arrive in Italy irregularly via Libya, seeking temporary work rather than permanent settlement.

The rising number of Bangladeshis making the journey signals an alarming new trend in the migrant labor industry: the blurring of the line between recruitment and smuggling. Young men—and sometimes women—pursue foreign jobs through recruiters, and in the process, get caught up in smuggling networks. Smugglers are now charging Bangladeshis exorbitant fees for the promise of a visa, passage, and employment in another country. But very often, a journey that begins with promises of a better life abroad turns into a harrowing ordeal involving risky passages and forced confinement. The recruits become trapped by the people who transport them. They travel through unknown lands without knowledge of local languages, and may have handed over passports and other valuables to their recruiters. Unable to escape even if they try, smuggled migrants become victims of trafficking.

This article explores the emerging phenomenon of irregular Bangladeshi migration to Europe, examining the country’s history of labor emigration more broadly, push factors at home, dangers along the journey, and government responses.

A Long History of Labor Migration

Bangladeshis are no strangers to seeking foreign employment, and the United Nations Population Division estimated that more than 7.2 million lived abroad in 2015, representing about 4.5 percent of the country’s population. Nearly 758,000 new workers set off in 2016, a 36 percent jump from a year earlier. Growing numbers of women are also choosing jobs internationally, making up 19 percent of all Bangladeshi foreign workers in 2015.

Temporary labor migration from Bangladesh began in the 1970s, intensified by the 1980s, and has continued growing since then. It has figured prominently in the country’s economic strategies, with governments pursuing development plans intended to maximize returns on available human capital. As Bangladesh gained a foothold in the international contract labor market, GCC countries became the primary destinations for workers.

Figure 1. Bangladeshis Newly Employed Abroad, 1976-2017*

FE-QayumBangladesh-F1.png


* The 2017 data cover January-August.
Source: Bangladesh Bureau for Manpower, Employment, and Training (BMET), “Overseas Employment and Remittances from 1976-2017 (Up to August),” accessed October 4, 2017, available online.

The migrant labor industry—at first well regulated, with well-paying and responsible employers—brought remittances that contributed significantly to the country’s economic growth. It visibly changed the rural economy: The best homesteads typically belonged to families with at least one son working in the Middle East. By the 1980s, many young men aspired to work abroad for a few years and come home with enough money to pave the way for a good life. These men started leaving to work in GCC countries—and eventually, in Malaysia and Singapore—all the while maintaining strong relationships with their families back home.

Today, Bangladesh’s economy continues to rely heavily on remittances. In 2015, the country ranked ninth among top remittance recipients, taking in nearly $15.4 billion—around 8 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP).

The majority of Bangladeshi migrant laborers still work in the GCC region. Meanwhile, most of the estimated 10 million unskilled and semi-skilled migrants employed in the region are from South and Southeast Asia, primarily Bangladesh, India, Indonesia, Pakistan, the Philippines, and Sri Lanka, according to a 2009 International Labor Organization (ILO) report.

Table 1. Top Destinations of New Bangladeshi Migrant Workers, 2017*

FE-QayumBangladesh-T1.png


* The 2017 data cover January-August.
Source: BMET, “Overseas Employment in 2017,” accessed September 18, 2017, available online.

With Malaysia and Singapore growing in popularity as destinations, an additional smuggling route has emerged across the Bay of Bengal, with travel in both directions. As Bangladeshi nationals venture out seeking work in Southeast Asian countries, persecuted Rohingya refugees from Myanmar head toward Bangladesh and Thailand. More than 500,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled to Bangladesh since late August 2017 in an attempt to escape violence and persecution at the hands of Myanmar’s army, in what United Nations officials have called a “textbook example of ethnic cleansing.”

Bangladeshis also migrate to India, reflecting another trend: migratory movements between low- or middle-income countries. While the numbers are not reflected in official data, India’s government estimated in 2016 that there were some 20 million Bangladeshis living in India illegally, which would make this migration corridor the largest in the world. Some are Hindu refugees, while others are trafficked for sex or forced labor.

Internal migration within Bangladesh has also increased. People from rural villages seek work in cities, due to declining demand for agricultural labor and a need for workers in the urban informal sector. Cities are bursting at the seams, with growing numbers of people arriving to work in the construction, transportation, and ready-made garments industries. Those seeking work are perfect targets for recruiting agencies.

Dalals: Recruiters or Smugglers?

For Bangladeshis, it is almost impossible to get work abroad—legal or otherwise—without a dalal, an agent who promises a visa and employment in exchange for exorbitant fees. Interviews with recently landed Bangladeshi migrants in Sicily reveal that many paid between US $4,000 and $5,000 on average to dalals who promised them work visas, according to IOM—an immense sum considering the average low-skilled worker in Bangladesh earns around $1,070 a year, according to the ILO. The recruiter fees could be as high as $15,000 for Bangladeshis seeking work in Europe, according to 2013 European Union estimates.

Dalals form an intricate, informal network at home, in destination countries, and at points of transfer in between. In Bangladesh, the agents recruit potential migrants, while in Italy, they help unauthorized arrivals apply for visas, and work with migrants and families to secure passage for their dependents.

Workers typically connect with dalals through personal networks. By the time migrants are en route to their destination, they have drained most of their resources to finance the trip. Families dip into their savings, sell assets, or take massive loans to send a child abroad in the hope that he or she will eventually provide for the family in the form of remittances. Very often, workers owe smugglers for these expenses, debts they are expected to repay as they work.

The journey often takes migrant workers from GCC countries or Turkey to Libya; in fact, the more than 4,600 Bangladeshis who arrived in Italy by sea between January and April 2017 departed from Libya. Before journeying across the Mediterranean, many Bangladeshis spent several years in Libya, where traffickers often seize migrants’ travel documents and force them into labor. Some end up in Libyan detention centers, living in horrific conditions.

Since the fall of Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi and subsequent unraveling of Libyan governance, violence and difficulty finding employment there have prompted many foreign workers to attempt a further journey to Europe. Between 50,000 and 80,000 Bangladeshis were working in Libya when Gaddafi was ousted in 2011. Most lost their jobs, but only a few had the resources to return to Bangladesh. As Libya has lacked a functional government to control its borders, the Libya-to-Italy corridor has become a lucrative route for smugglers.

Dubai Dream Deferred

Despite the dangers of the journey, increasing unemployment and political instability at home are leading more young Bangladeshis to seek employment abroad, whether in Europe or elsewhere. This path does not always have a happy ending. The men and women who build and maintain the glamorous cities in the GCC region often experience difficult and unsafe working conditions. In many cases they cannot leave, as they are trapped in debt from making the journey and employers confiscate their passports. On average, it takes workers 17 months to recoup their recruiter fees and travel costs to Saudi Arabia, around 11 months for the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Oman, and roughly ten months for Bahrain, Libya, and Qatar.

Unsafe, and sometimes deadly, working conditions exact an even greater toll, typically on young men. In 2016, the bodies of 3,481 dead migrants were repatriated to Bangladesh—a rate of nine and ten arriving daily at the airports, on average.

Beyond harsh working conditions, the economic slowdown resulting from falling oil prices and government policies designed to promote the employment of native-born workers are causing the shine to wear off GCC destinations for some Bangladeshis. Amid its “Saudization” campaign to shift the labor force balance toward Saudi nationals, the Saudi government in 2008 paused the migration of male workers, reinstating visas for Bangladeshis only in early 2017. Because much recruitment of Bangladeshis happens through informal networks and word of mouth, the return of migrants from Saudi Arabia signals to potential recruits that the country is no longer a lucrative option.

Still, international labor markets have become all the more important for young Bangladeshi men who see no future at home. Imagined foreign destinations become a hopeful place. And Europe has emerged as an attractive alternative to the Gulf, at least in people’s thinking.

Destination: Italy

Italy has long been a destination of interest for Bangladeshis. In 2009, 84,000 Bangladeshi immigrants lived in Italy and a report issued that year, the Fifteenth Italian Report on Migration, forecast the number would reach 232,000 by 2030. Many are unauthorized, with estimates ranging from 11,000 to 74,000. Bangladeshis working in Italy are mostly single men who send money home and split their time between the two countries. They are integrated into Italian communities and doing fairly well economically, earning money by running restaurants and selling goods in the streets.

Bangladeshi migration to Italy began in the 1980s and 1990s, when many arrived from other European countries after learning of Italy’s relatively liberal immigration policies. Others have since arrived through family reunification visas. In 2002, Italy passed an immigration law that led to the regularization of more than 700,000 immigrants. The law introduced a quota system that allowed migrants to stay if they could find an employer willing to support their legalization through a complicated bureaucratic procedure. Since 2006, 3,000 Bangladeshis have been able to work in Italy legally under the new law. This prompted an influx of unauthorized entries, under the assumption that they too would be legalized.

But Italy has since modified its policy, reducing visa numbers for Bangladesh and other countries, and it is no longer easy to gain documentation. Meanwhile, smugglers have continued to transport migrants through unauthorized means, most reaching Italy by traveling from Libya to the island of Lampedusa, south of Sicily.

Once in Europe, some Bangladeshis file for asylum. The number of Bangladeshi asylum applications has nearly tripled, from roughly 6,000 for all of Europe in 2008 to more than 17,000 in 2016. Italy received the most asylum applications from Bangladeshis in 2016, with 6,665; followed by France with 3,155 and Germany with 2,655. While some Bangladeshis are able to demonstrate valid grounds for asylum—for example being a member of the persecuted opposition—others are simply looking for a legal way to stay and work. Overall, asylum recognition rates for Bangladeshis were low, around 17 percent on average, compared to 98 percent for Syrians and 61 percent for all nationalities.

Policy Responses at Destination and Origin

The European Union has been pressuring Bangladesh to encourage its unauthorized migrants to return, threatening to impose visa restrictions on Bangladeshi nationals unless the government takes action to repatriate its citizens. The Bangladeshi government planned to finalize procedures for returns by September 2017, though the exact details of the plan were unclear. It has emphasized that while it wants to bring back irregular workers, safe and regular migration channels must be expanded.

Italy has undertaken a number of efforts to curb smuggling in the Central Mediterranean. The Italian government agreed to send naval patrol boats to Libya to support the Libyan coast guard in its fight against human smugglers. It has also engaged in negotiations with local militias to prevent the dispatching of migrant-laden boats—while offering little protection for migrants themselves. And concerned that search-and-rescue efforts mounted by nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) in the Mediterranean are facilitating smuggling, Italy introduced a new code of conduct for NGOs engaged in migrant rescue operations, which includes a ban on sending light signals and transferring migrants to other ships. NGOs, several of which have refused to sign the code, insist that it will lead to more deaths, as their boats have picked up more than one-third of migrants brought to shore in 2017.

Establishing a Framework at Origin to Protect Migrant Workers

As destination countries seek to reduce irregular arrivals, Bangladesh has strengthened its policies for the protection of nationals who deploy abroad. The country has no shortage of mechanisms to protect the rights of those who are formally employed. In 1982, Bangladesh enacted an emigration ordinance to monitor and regulate the departure of migrant workers. The Overseas Employment Policy followed in 2006, to ensure the rights of workers to choose quality employment. Implementation has been ad hoc, however. In 2011, Bangladesh passed the Migration and Overseas Employment Act, which seeks to govern migration by protecting migrant rights. It includes provisions to facilitate emergency return of migrants during crises, crack down on fraudulent practices, and increase recruitment agency accountability.

However, these institutional safeguards have become less effective as recruitment networks have become increasingly complex and difficult to penetrate. Although agencies are primarily based in Dhaka, they recruit through informal agents and subagents throughout the country. More than 10,000 unregistered and unidentified agents operate across Bangladesh, according to the Refugee and Migratory Movements Research Unit based at the University of Dhaka. Agents inform potential clients about job opportunities, recruit workers, and handle the finances.

The complexity of these networks makes it difficult to identify where formal recruiting ends and smuggling—or trafficking—begins. Smugglers and traffickers are also difficult to track down and prosecute, and the conviction rate for trafficking is extremely low. Between 2011 and 2014, Bangladesh reported just 11 to 15 convictions per year for human-trafficking cases, even as the number of cases lodged against alleged traffickers surged, according to a 2016 UN Office on Drugs and Crime report. The report attributes the low number of convictions to the fact that most laws in this area are recent, and that national criminal justice systems need time and resources to build the expertise to successfully handle human-trafficking prosecutions.

A Way Forward?

Given Bangladesh’s economic and political challenges, it is highly unlikely that the desire to chase the international dream will diminish anytime soon for many Bangladeshis—particularly as long as a vast network of recruiters dangles the prospects of connections to well-heeled employers. While the Bangladeshi government could ramp up regulation and monitoring of recruitment agencies and their activities along the entire journey, this is a massive challenge, exacerbated by the intricate web of legal and illegal actors between origin and destination. In the meantime, workers will continue to pursue dangerous, uncertain paths—some making it to their destinations, while others find themselves detained or otherwise trapped in Libya, their Dubai Dreams deferred.

Sources

Afsar, Rita. 2000. Rural-Urban Migration in Bangladesh: Causes, Consequences, and Challenges. Dhaka: University Press Limited.
 
.
The ordinary people of Pakistan DO NOT want to leave their families and go to work in Middle East or some other countries. But due the Corrupt Ruling Establishment of Pakistan, there are minimum job opportunities in Pakistan. Due to this, these ordinary people are left with no choice but to move and work overseas. If there were good opportunities in Pakistan, then people would not be in such a shameful situation that Pakistan's people have to beg for jobs from these fat, incompetent Arabs.

I keep on saying this again and again, that it is the corrupt Ruling Junta in Pakistan which has destroyed Pakistan and its people, they have enslaved people and given them to the Arabs as slave Labour. And till these blood sucking basta.rds are not hang via their balls, this country will never prosper and will always remain in the state of war and destruction.
We like to bow before every country willing to throw some bread crumbs our way. Our top favorite are USA, Saudi and now China joined the club.
 
.

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom