H2B Press Watch

Entries from March 2008

UN: USA Mistreating Migrant Workers after Katrina

March 10, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Via Texas Civil Rights Review: http://texascivilrightsreview.org/phpnuke/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1184

 UN: USA Mistreating Migrant Workers after Katrina

Excerpt from March 7, 2008 report of UN Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Migrants.

III. THE PLIGHT OF MIGRANT WORKERS: THE CASE OF HURRICANE KATRINA

A. Background

88. In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, which devastated New Orleans and other areas of the United States Gulf Coast in 2005, several hundred thousand workers, mostly African Americans, lost their jobs and their homes, and many became internally displaced persons (IDPs). Since the storm, these IDPs have faced tremendous structural barriers to returning home and to finding the employment necessary to rebuild their lives. Without housing, they cannot work; without work, they cannot afford housing. Since Hurricane Katrina, tens of thousands of migrant workers, most of them undocumented, have arrived in the Gulf Coast region to work in the reconstruction zones. They have made up much of the labour to rebuild the area, to keep businesses running and to boost tax revenue. To support their families, migrant workers often work longer hours for less pay than other labourers. For some migrant workers, wages continue to decrease. Jobs are becoming scarcer because the most urgent work, gutting homes and removing debris, is mostly finished.

89. These migrant workers, like their original local counterparts, are finding barriers to safe employment, fair pay, and affordable housing, and in some cases, experience discrimination and exploitation amounting to inhuman and degrading treatment. In fact, many workers are homeless or living in crowded, unsafe and unsanitary conditions, harassed and intimidated by law enforcement, landlords and employers alike.

90. Migrant workers on the Gulf Coast are experiencing an unprecedented level of exploitation. They often live and work amid substandard conditions, homelessness, poverty, environmental toxicity, and the constant threat of police and immigration raids, without any guarantee of a fair day’s pay. They also face structural barriers that make it impossible to hold public or private institutions accountable for their mistreatment; most have no political voice.

91. The dramatically increased presence of migrant workers in the region has fuelled local tensions over language barriers, education and health-care needs in a public services system strained by Katrina. The low-wage workers rebuilding New Orleans and the Mississippi Gulf Coast are almost entirely people of African, Asian and Hispanic and/or indigenous descent, many of whom are recent migrants from Latin America and Asia and many of whom are not proficient in English. African American residents are often pitted against migrant workers new to the area, with racial and ethnic tensions between marginalized minority groups in the region escalating. Moreover, as some internally displaced persons return to the region, concern is rising that migrant labourers have diminished job prospects for pre-Katrina residents. Day labourers shared stories with the Special Rapporteur about how they are paid less than promised, or not at all. They note that they are trying to rebuild a city that welcomed them when the most dangerous work needed to be done; only to rebuff them as the pace of rebuilding diminishes.

92. The stories of workers across the New Orleans metro area and the Gulf Coast after Katrina are not simply tales of personal plight. They are also stories about institutional responsibility. In the days following the hurricane, certain agencies of the federal Government came under fierce criticism for being slow to act. Yet, in actuality, other parts of the federal Government sprang into action quite quickly with a range of policy initiatives that were breathtaking in their scope and impact on workers.

93. The treatment of workers in New Orleans constitutes a national human rights crisis. Because these workers are typically migrant, displaced, undocumented, or have temporary work authorization, they have little chance to hold officials and private industry accountable (e.g., many cannot vote, while displaced New Orleanais continue to experience barriers to voting). New Orleans is being rebuilt on the backs of underpaid and unpaid workers perpetuating cycles of poverty that existed pre-Katrina. Hurricane Katrina helped create a situation where there is no Government or private accountability for the creation and maintenance of these inequities. Internally displaced voters have no voice back home, and reconstruction workers are either non-residents or non-citizens. As a result, contractors have free reign to exploit workers, and the Government has felt little pressure to ensure that migrant workers are protected and able to access what is needed to meet basic human needs.

94. As noted above, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), and the International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families establish workers’ rights to (a) a safe and healthful workplace, (b) compensation for workplace injuries and illnesses, (c) freedom of association and the right to form trade uni*ns and bargain collectively, and (d) equality of conditions and rights for immigrant workers.

95. Immigrant workers, including those who migrated to work in the regions affected by Katrina, often experience violations of these rights. Lack of familiarity with United States law and language difficulties often prevent them from being aware of their rights as well as specific hazards in their work. Immigrant workers who are undocumented, as many are, risk deportation if they seek to organize to improve conditions. Fear of drawing attention to their immigration status also prevents them from seeking protection from Government authorities for their rights as workers. In 2002, the Supreme Court stripped undocumented workers of any remedies if they are illegally fired for uni*n organizing activity. Under international law, however, undocumented workers are entitled to the same labour rights, including wages owed, protection from discrimination, protection for health and safety on the job and back pay, as are citizens and those working lawfully in a country.

96. Furthermore, pre- and post-Katrina policies and practices of local, state and federal government agencies have had a grossly disproportionate impact on migrants of colour, in violation of the United States Government’s obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (CERD) and other human rights norms that the United States has ratified.

B. Institutional responsibility

97. Personal stories recounted to the Special Rapporteur illuminate the commonality of the struggles faced by migrant workers but also the institutional responsibility, and how both policies and practices perpetuate structural and institutional racism and xenophobia. Across the city of New Orleans, workers – both returning internally displaced persons and new migrant workers – list calamities that have become routine: homelessness, wage theft, toxic working conditions, joblessness, police brutality, and layers of bureaucracy. These shared experiences with structural racism unite low-wage workers across racial, ethnic, and industry lines. Thousands of workers now live in the same conditions: they sleep in the homes they are gutting or in abandoned cars that survivors were forced to leave behind; they are packed in motels, sometimes 10 to a room; and they live on the streets. Most migrant workers were promised housing by their employers but quickly found upon arrival that no housing accommodation had been made available. Instead, they were left homeless.

98. By all accounts, state and local governments have turned a blind eye to this dismal housing situation. Although the city depends on migrant workers to act as a flexible, temporary workforce, it also made no arrangements to provide them with temporary housing. As a result, the workers who are rebuilding New Orleans often have nowhere to sleep.

99. The federal Government has sent mixed messages. On the one hand, it relaxed the immigration law requirements relating to hiring practices, thereby sending a message to contractors that hiring undocumented workers was permissible if not condoned. On the other hand, federal authorities failed to assure these workers and their family members that they would not be turned over to immigration authorities.

100. New migrant workers on the Gulf Coast have experienced a range of problems relating to wage theft which include:

  • Non-payment of wages for work performed, including overtime
  • Payment of wages with cheques that bounce due to insufficient funds
  • Inability to identify the employer or contractor in order to pursue claims for unpaid wages
  • Subcontractors – often migrants themselves – who want to but cannot pay wages because they have not been paid by the primary contractor (often a more financially stable white contractor)

 

101. These conditions are particularly salient for migrant workers, especially if they are undocumented as they are more easily exploitable. They may be hired for their hard manual labour and then robbed of their legally owed wages. The situation is exacerbated by the complexity of local employment structures. Because there are multiple tiers of subcontractors, often flowing from a handful of primary contractors with federal Government contracts, workers often do not know the identities of their employers. This is typical of the growing contingent of low-wage workers throughout the country. In New Orleans, workers explained that without knowing the identity of their employer, they cannot pursue wage claims against them.

102. Numerous workers have witnessed immigration raids by ICE and local law enforcement across the city of New Orleans, at large hotels downtown, the bus station, hiring sites across the city, the Superdome, on work sites, in the parking lots of home improvement stores, and even inside homes that workers are gutting or rebuilding. Workers report frequent immigration raids; retaliatory calls to immigration authorities, or threats of such calls, by employers; and collaboration between local law enforcement agents and ICE to the benefit of employers.

103. The lack of labour and human rights enforcement in the Gulf Coast stands in stark contrast to the aggressive tactics employed by local police and ICE, who readily respond to tips from unscrupulous employers who report workers that voice employment-related grievances. As a result, ICE raids on day labourer and other work sites have increased substantially in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. Both ICE and the Department of Labor have expressed their commitment to developing a process whereby ICE will determine, before deporting any worker detained on the Gulf Coast, whether the worker has any unpaid wage claims. Although ICE and the Department are reportedly engaged in ongoing consultations on this subject, no agreement appears to be in place. Workers live in fear of these tactics every day and most cannot or will not complain for fear of more severe repercussions.

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Blog: Pascagoula: Scene of a mutiny

March 10, 2008 · Leave a Comment

http://www.sepiamutiny.com/sepia/archives/005083.html

Pascagoula: Scene of a Mutiny (updated)News

The plight of South Asian (mostly Malayalee) indentured servants workers employed by Signal International at shipyards in Pascagoula, Mississippi started gaining notice in more of the mainstream media late last week, and this week should see the sad story gain even greater visibility…and a stronger reaction on behalf of the workers. First, a quick background on the situation, in which these workers, among many other immigrant laborers, were brought over to help clean up the mess left behind by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita work at the shipyards (but many others to do hurricane recovery work):

About 100 Indian workers walked off their jobs at Signal International, a Pascagoula shipyard Thursday.

They talk of broken promises and shattered dreams. The Indian workers came to America for job opportunity. They now face the risk of being deported after quitting their jobs at Signal and accusing the company of illegal “human trafficking…” 

I slit my wrists to kill myself. There was no other option for me. I didn’t know what I was doing. The situation forced me to do so. I was in a horrible situation. Signal was retaliating against me for organizing my people for our rights,” he told the group of fellow workers and visiting media.

They talk of living “like pigs in a cage” in a company-run “work camp.”

“I’ve been a guest worker all my life. I’ve never seen these kinds of conditions,” said the interpreter, “We lived 24 people to a room. And for this, the company deducted $1,050 a month from our paychecks…” [Link]

 

 

This sounds more like Dubai than Pascagoula! Although ~100 workers picketed, there are actually 4-6 times that many who are stuck in the same situation but didn’t want to expose themselves in such a high profile manner, or have their families worry about them. For additional background I point you to SAJA’s coverage and also to Maitri’s blog. This ABC news article has a link to an inspiring slideshow wherein the workers are photographed ceremonially casting off their hard hats, the symbols of their servitude, as if they were shackles. In response, Signal issued this press release saying that the accusations are “baseless.” Uh huh.

 

 

 

 

Evidence of “baseless” accusations by the workers

Is there an impending lawsuit on behalf of these workers? Arun Venugopal at the SAJA forum blog starts his post this way:

For several months I’ve been seeing mention of a job opening for a Malayalam-and-Hindi speaking paralegal at the Southern Poverty Law Center, in Alabama. I couldn’t imagine what the exact need was, but much as I tried, I couldn’t get a full answer from the people at SPLC. Clearly, there was some sort of litigation in the works and they didn’t want to tip their hand. All they could say was that there an “increasing number of Indian guestworkers seeking assistance from our office with labor trafficking and exploitation as part of a larger trend that involves recruiting workers from farther away and charging increased recruitment fees…” [Link]

For those of you legal-eagle mutineers in search of an honest mutiny to join, there is still a job opening at the SPLC:

Bilingual Paralegal

Legal
Full time

The Immigrant Justice Project of the Southern Poverty Law Center is seeking a bilingual (Hindi and English) paralegal for its Immigrant Justice Project. The Project represents low-income immigrants in high-impact employment and civil rights cases throughout nine states in the South.

This is a one year position, with a heavy focus on preparing applications for immigration relief on behalf of workers who are victims of human trafficking and other crimes. Extensive travel is required. The paralegal should be fluent in Malayalam or Hindi A commitment to immigrant rights is essential.

The paralegal will perform extensive outreach to clients and assist with field investigations, preparation of immigration documents, discovery, and trial preparation. The paralegal will also assist the Center’s attorneys with case management and support, conduct research, and organize information. [Link]

There are other organizations looking to help these workers as well. One of the more prominent ones is the New Orleans Workers’ Center for Racial Justice. They have published this heartbreaking look at many of the situations/stories in which workers (both native and immigrant) have been exploited during the hurricane recovery efforts. Here is the story of Pravit, a South Asian worker:

“It was scary because there were troops patrolling the area all the time. We were afraid that if the soldiers arrested us, they would deport us.“We stayed in three different hotels…[The third hotel] was ruined. It had no electricity or hot water. We couldn’t drink the water there. We had to stand in line at the water truck to be rationed water. We had to light candles to cook in the evening…[our supervisor] told us we had to draw the curtains in the evening so no light would show. He said the hotel was declared off limits and we weren’t supposed to be staying there. I didn’t feel good. We had to hide at that hotel.

“While we were at the third hotel, we ran out of money for food and propane…and we ran out of rice. We had no food and we were hungry. We told our supervisor. He said he didn’t have any money, either, and that the owners of the places we were cleaning had paid our main boss our wages but the main boss had taken all the money and gone back to North Carolina.

“At this time I felt helpless.”

Returning to the plight of the Signal workers, the Indian government is now getting “involved”:

Even as their Mumbai-based recruiters tried to wash their hands off workers protesting over inhuman living conditions in Pascagoula, Mississippi, Minister of Overseas Indian Affairs Vayalar Ravi has written to the Indian ambassador in Washington to investigate the matter.

The minister’s letter comes after Hindustan Times reported on the plight of the 120-odd Indian workers on Saturday. “I’ve written to the ambassador,” Ravi said. “I’ve also asked him to send a team of officials to the shipyard.” Added Rahul Chhabra, Embassy of India spokesman in Washington: “We are ascertaining full details from our consulate in Houston, which is looking into the matter…” 

Dewan Consultants Pvt Ltd, the Mumbai-based recruiter for Signal International, distanced itself from the controversy saying its contract with the workers had ended last year.

“Our responsibility ended as soon as their probation period got over. Legally, we are not responsible for what happened afterward,” said Sachin Dewan, MD, Dewan Consultants Pvt Ltd.

He added: “If they found the living conditions unfit, they should have come back then, instead of making a hue and cry now…” [Link]

The funny thing is that Signal International’s “news” page doesn’t mention any of this. I wonder why?

If you want to ask them you can contact them here:

Corporate Office
P.O. Box 7007
Pascagoula, MS 39568
601 Bayou Casotte Parkway
Pascagoula, MS 39581

Phone: 228-762-0010

More on this topic soon… (and expect to see new SM banners soon featuring these mutineers).

 

Correction: This particular incident is not directly tied to the Katrina or Rita clean-ups. This is just about being exploited working at the shipyards. However, the hurricanes caused a massive worker shortage which is why these men were brought over.

Update: Here is a copy of the lawsuit filed on behalf of the workers by SPLC, the Worker’s Center for Racial Justice, and the Asian American Legal Defense Fund

KURIAN DAVID, SONY VASUDEVAN SULEKHA,

PALANYANDI THANGAMANI,

MARUGANANTHAM KANDHASAMY, HEMANT

KHUTTAN, ANDREWS ISSAC PADAVEETTIYL,

and DHANANJAYA KECHURU, on behalf of other

similarly situated individuals, and SABULAL

VIJAYAN, KRISHAN KUMAR, JACOB JOSEPH

KADDAKKARAPPALLY, KULDEEP SINGH, AND

THANASEKAR CHELLAPPAN, individually,

Plaintiffs,

v.

SIGNAL INTERNATIONAL LLC, MALVERN C.

BURNETT, GULF COAST IMMIGRATION LAW

CENTER, L.L.C., LAW OFFICES OF MALVERN C.

BURNETT, A.P.C., INDO-AMERI SOFT L.L.C.,

KURELLA RAO, J & M ASSOCIATES, INC. OF

MISSISSIPPI, GLOBAL RESOURCES, INC.,

MICHAEL POL, SACHIN DEWAN, and DEWAN

CONSULTANTS PVT. LTD. (a/k/a MEDTECH

CONSULTANTS).

Defendants

Here is one of the many charges:

9. Plaintiffs assert class action claims against Defendants arising from violations of 

their rights under the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act (“TVPA”); the

Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”); the Civil Rights Act of 1866

(42 U.S.C. § 1981); the Ku Klux Klan Act of 1871 (42 U.S.C. § 1985); collective action claims

under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA); and claims for damages arising from

fraud/negligent misrepresentation and breach of contract. Plaintiffs Sabulal Vijayan, Jacob

Joseph Kadakkarappally, Kuldeep Singh, Krishan Kumar, and Thanasekar Chellappan also

bring individual claims arising from the retaliation in violations of the Civil Rights Act of 1866

(42 U.S.C. § 1981); the Ku Klux Klan Act of 1871 (42 U.S.C. § 1985), false imprisonment,

assault, battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress and/or negligent infliction of

emotional distress.

abhi on March 10, 2008 12:43 AM in Law, News · T·r·a·c·k·b·a·c·k address · Direct link · Email post

 

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Hindustan Times: US dreams lost in packed dorms, stink in stale food

March 9, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Title: US dream lost in packed dorms, stink of stale food
Source: Hindustan Times
URL Source: http://www.hindustantimes.com/StoryPage/StoryPage.aspx? id=ea2ccd78-fcb2-41c9-8ddc-f71b0e285e75&&Head
Published: Mar 9, 2008
Author: Ginger Gibson
Post Date: 2008-03-09 19:08:04 by supertracpak
3 Comments

When Kurian David sold his home, he believed he was doing so to seek a better life in the US for him and his family. He was promised good wages, decent accommodation, a green card and permanent residency for him, his wife and two sons. He paid $20,000 (Rs 8 lakh) in exchange for a job at the Signal International shipyard in Orange, Texas.

The workers joined forces with the New Orleans Workers’ Racial Justice Coalition and the Southern Poverty Law Center and are trying to raise awareness about their plight – one they say included tricking them into paying large sums of money to come to the US where they were abused by their employers.When he arrived at the facility there was no opportunity for his dreams to come to fruition. Instead, he lived in a room with 23 other men, sleeping in bunk beds and sharing two bathrooms. David, 41, said he worked 10-hour days in the hull of a ship where he inhaled fumes and smoke. He was served stale bread for breakfast and forced to eat lunches left in the elements for hours.

When he and fellow workers at the plant complained, they were told they would be deported, a paralysing possibility because of the debt he incurred getting the job. “I decided to gamble everything,” David said. “We felt bonded. We felt like we were in prison. None the less, we ate their rotten food and stayed in their degrading conditions because they promised us green cards.”

David is one of about 120 workers brought to the US from India to work for Signal International in their two shipyards who walked off the job last week in protest. Signal issued a statement after the protest that stated the claims of the workers were false and that adequate living conditions had been provided.

Signal employees refused to allow media on to the site in Pascagoula, Mississippi, and would not comment further when contacted via telephone. Saket Soni, director of the New Orleans Worker’s Racial Justice Coalition, said about 100 workers from India remain at the Signal facilities.

The workers joined forces with the New Orleans Workers’ Racial Justice Coalition and the Southern Poverty Law Center and are trying to raise awareness about their plight – one they say included tricking them into paying large sums of money to come to the US where they were abused by their employers.

The workers and their lawyers say the workers are victims of human trafficking – tricked into a scheme and then abused and exploited with horrific work conditions.

The Pascagoula plant is located on the eastern side of the small Gulf Coast city that was damaged during Hurricane Katrina. Outside the gates, a small sign directs drivers to the “man camp,” the Signal-built bunkers where the workers were forced to live.

 

 

For many, the journey to the secluded compound began with a newspaper advertisement.

Rajan Pazhambalakode, 35, was on vacation from a job he held with British Petroleum in Russia. In Kerala, he saw an ad promising permanent residency in the US. Pazhambalakode said he contacted Sachin Dewan, and was told he must pay $20,000 within 10 days. “On December 5, 2006, I looked one last time at my house, and I sold it to arrange the money,” Pazhambalakode said. “My house was worth about $30,000, but I had to get a buyer that day.”

About 24 men crammed into a 36-foot by 24-foot rooms filled with bunk beds and only two bathrooms, David said. There were no changing areas, Pazhambalakode said. When he complained about a lack of chairs, the plant manager mocked them by demonstrating how they should jump onto the top bunks, sit to change clothes and jump down.

Since half the men worked during the day and the other half at night, Pazhambalakode said they were never allowed to turn the lights on in the rooms.

Signal deducted $35 a day for rent and food. David said some workers had asked to leave the property and find cheaper housing nearby, where they could cook. But Signal employees told them it wasn’t an option.

They were forbidden to have guests and had no means to leave the compound, David said. There were no phones, either. There was one TV room for 50 men, said Hemant Khuttan, 27. And no other forms of entertainment. “We couldn’t sleep,” Khuttan said. “We couldn’t sit in our beds. We would spend our time lying there, thinking about how we got caught in this situation.”

Food came from the cafeteria, and purchasing or preparing food was not allowed. David said they were served stale bread and jam for breakfast. They packed lunch. When it was cold, he said, the food was like ice, and when it was hot, the food was rotten by lunch. “We had to sit in the garbage,” he said.

Pipe-fitting and welding requires crawling through small “cells” within the hull of the ship. David navigated through a maze of two-foot wide passageways in the bottom of the ship, 10 minutes from any assistance if something were to happen to him.

There he welded metal and glass, creating smoke and releasing carbon dioxide, he said. The cells were dark and the smoke made it impossible to see someone standing as close as three-feet away. David said they had to work 10-hour days, but only Indian workers would have to work multiple days a week in the worst conditions, others would do alternate days.

If they complained, Khuttan said, Signal employees told them they could return to India. However, most workers were in predicaments that prevented them from being able to return.

Because of the restrictions of their temporary visas, they were not permitted to seek employment from another company. “That is why a lot of people decided to quit and run away,” he said.

 

Categories: Uncategorized

Hindustan Times: Indians treated ‘like pigs’ in US

March 8, 2008 · Leave a Comment

New Delhi, March 08, 2008

Over a hundred Indian workers at a shipyard in a small American town on the Gulf of Mexico lodged a dramatic protest against inhuman living and working conditions on Thursday, singing “We Shall Overcome”, and tossing their hard hats in the air.

The workers, hired from India in 2006 to tide over a labour shortage in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina that killed over 1,800 on the Gulf coast in August 2005, said they were made to live “like pigs in a cage” in a “work camp” run by their employer, marine fabrication company Signal International, in Pascagoula, Mississippi.

The workers said an earlier attempt at protest had been ruthlessly muzzled, prompting a worker to attempt suicide. The worker had been sacked and police had been called in to control the situation. The protesters said they had been lured with promises of permanent US residency into a “human trafficking ring” run by Signal International.

Signal issued a statement denying the charges. But it said 500 workers were recruited from India two years ago, after Katrina. The company said it had sponsored the workers for H2B visas.

Hindustan Times spoke to Sabulal Vijayan, the 40-year-old pipe-fitter who had been fired for organising the workers on the previous occasion.

He accused Signal of reducing the workers’ already meagre pay by almost a third, and described the conditions in which the Indians stayed at the “camp”.

“Initially, we were paid $18 a day and it was later reduced to 13,” Vijayan said.

“Twenty-four of us stayed in one cramped dormitory that included our beds, showers and water coolers. All of us had paid between Rs 6 lakh and Rs 10 lakh to a Mumbai-based recruiter to get to the US. We were all promised green cards,” he added.

WLOX-TV, a local TV channel, which covered the protest widely, reported that many workers had taken huge loans to raise the amount, and now felt trapped. The channel quoted Saket Soni of the New Orleans Workers’ Center for Racial Justice, who served as an interpreter for the workers at a press conference.

The channel quoted Vijayan as saying: “I slit my wrists to kill myself (on the earlier occasion). There was no other option for me. Signal was retaliating against me.”

The workers were “trapped between an ocean of debt at home and constant threats of deportation from our bosses in Mississippi”, the channel quoted Vijayan as saying.

Soni, 30, told Hindustan Times: “We will now demand that the US government and the Department of Justice prosecute the company and recruiters for the crime of human trafficking.” He added that Signal International was currently recruiting again in India, but this could not be independently verified.

Soni said: “We will explore our legal options. But we have already begun a campaign for prosecution of the company.”

Signal said it had spent over $7 million to construct state-of-the-art housing complexes for the workers, and was paying them “greater wages than that they could earn in their home country”.

The company said facilities and labour practices had been inspected and approved by both the US Department of Labour and the Federal Immigration and Customs Division.

Categories: Uncategorized

ABC News: Revolt in Mississippi: Indian Workers Claim ‘Slave Treatment’

March 7, 2008 · Leave a Comment

http://www.abcnews.go.com/Blotter/story?id=4409785&page=1

Revolt in Mississippi: Indian Workers Claim ‘Slave Treatment’

Workers Call for Signal International to Be Prosecuted on Alleged Human Trafficking Charges

By JOSEPH RHEE

March 7, 2008—

 

 

Rebelling against alleged “slave treatment,” some 100 workers recruited from India staged a dramatic protest at a Mississippi shipyard Thursday, claiming they had been tricked into coming to the United States.

The workers, brought from India to work as welders and pipe-fitters at Signal International shipyard in Pascagoula, hurled their hard hats at company gates and demanded a federal investigation.

The workers claim they were defrauded by a Signal International recruiter in India who promised them green cards and permanent residency in the U.S. in exchange for a $20,000 fee. The workers allege that they instead received 10-month work visas, which was only enough time for them to pay off their recruitment fees.

The workers also claim that Signal forced them to live in substandard housing, with 24 men crammed into a small room. The men say Signal charged them more than $1,000 a month to live in company housing.

“For more than one year, hundreds of Indian workers at Signal International have been living like slaves,” said former Signal worker Sabulal Vijayan. “Today the workers are coming out to declare their freedom. This trafficking needs to end.”

The workers have reported their situation to the U.S. Department of Justice and are calling for Signal International to be prosecuted on human trafficking charges.

Signal International strongly denied the workers’ allegations. The company released a statement saying, “Unfortunately, a few of the workers whom Signal had sponsored for H2B visas and recruited have made baseless and unfounded allegations against Signal concerning their employment and living conditions.” According to the statement, “The vast majority of the workers whom Signal recruited has been satisfied with the employment and living conditions at Signal.”

Signal called its housing complex “state of the art” and said government inspections have “found that Signal’s practices and facilities are fully compliant with the law.”

The Mississippi Gulf Coast has faced a severe labor shortage in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, and many companies have replenished their workforce with overseas labor brought in under a guest worker plan. Human rights groups, however, charge that many foreign workers have been exploited by their employers.

“The U.S. State Department calls it ‘a repulsive crime’ when recruiters and employers in other parts of the world bind guest workers with crushing debts and threats of deportation,” said Saket Soni of the New Orleans Workers’ Center for Racial Justice. “This is precisely what is happening on the Gulf Coast.”

Categories: Uncategorized