Military Contractor in Iraq Holds Foreign Workers in Warehouses
BAGHDAD - About 1,000 Asian men who were hired by a Kuwaiti subcontractor to the U.S. military have been confined for as long as three months in windowless warehouses near the Baghdad airport without money or a place to work.
Najlaa International Catering Services, a subcontractor to KBR, an engineering, construction and services company, hired the men, who're from India, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh. On Tuesday, they staged a march outside their compound to protest their living conditions.
"It's really dirty," a Sri Lankan man told McClatchy, speaking on the condition of anonymity because he still wants to work for Najlaa. "For all of us, there are about 12 toilets and about 10 bathrooms. The food - it's three half-liter (one pint) bottles of water a day. Bread, cheese and jam for breakfast. Lunch is a small piece of meat, potato and rice. Dinner is rice and dal, but it's not dal," he said, referring to the Indian lentil dish.
After McClatchy began asking questions about the men on Tuesday, the Kuwaiti contractor announced that it would return them to their home countries and pay them back salaries. Najlaa officials contended that they've cared for the men's basic needs while the company has tried to find them jobs in Iraq.
The laborers said they paid middlemen more than $2,000 to get to Iraq for jobs that they were told would earn them $600 to $800 a month. Some of the men took out loans to cover the fees.
"They promised us the moon and stars," said Davidson Peters, 42, a Sri Lankan. "While we are here, wives have left their husbands and children have been shut out of their schools" because money for the families has dried up. The men live in three warehouses with long rows of bunk beds crammed tightly together. Reporters who tried to get a better glimpse inside were ushered away by armed guards.
The conditions in which the men have been held appear to violate guidelines the U.S. military handed down in 2006 that urged contractors to deter human trafficking to the war zone by shunning recruiters that charged excessive fees. The guidelines also defined "minimum acceptable" living spaces - 50 square feet per person - and required companies to fulfill the pledges they made to employees in contracts.
A U.S. military spokesman for the Multi-National Force-Iraq referred questions to KBR, a Texas-based former subsidiary of Halliburton. The spokesman said that the American military wasn't aware of the warehouses until McClatchy and the Times of London began asking questions about it on Monday.
Some of the men who've been living in the warehouses said that KBR representatives visited the site two weeks ago. They said Najlaa held their passports until the KBR inspection, which Najlaa officials denied. Seizing passports is a violation of the U.S. military's 2006 instructions to contractors.
KBR didn't answer direct questions about the warehouses but issued a two-paragraph statement. "When KBR becomes aware of potential violations of international laws regarding trafficking in persons, we work, within our authority, to remediate the problem and report the matter to proper authorities. KBR then works with authorities to rectify the matter," it said.
Reached in Kuwait, Najlaa chief executive Marwan Rizk said the company recruited the laborers for contracts it expected to begin servicing, but the work didn't materialize. He didn't specify which contracts fell through or why they were delayed. The company offers a number of services in Iraq, including catering at U.S. military bases. "We had some obstacles with the services we were contracted to do," Rizk said. "These obstacles were not forecasted."
He said it's the company's practice to begin paying its employees once they start their jobs, though Najlaa credits them from the time they arrive in Iraq.
While the main complaint in the warehouses centered on living in what many considered prison-like conditions, Najlaa officials said it was crucial to keep the men in the compound to prevent kidnappings or other dangers. "We're in Iraq; it's a war zone," said Isha Rufaie, a Najlaa logistics manager who tried to calm the protest Tuesday.
Peters, the Sri Lankan, said the men had notified Najlaa officials in advance, and the firm had agreed to let them protest their status outside their compound. They walked in thick clusters up and down an airport side road that wouldn't be visible even to the sparse traffic that passes on the airport's primary routes.
The protest, nonetheless, caught the attention of Sabre, a British company that holds a contract to maintain security at the airport.
Sabre officers halted the protest by telling Najlaa to get the men back in the compound. Najlaa officials did so by telling the men they'd be paid Tuesday. They returned to the camp voicing skepticism that Najlaa would follow through. Some of them, reached by phone later in the day, said they hadn't been paid.
Sabre representatives said they've closed similar buildings housing laborers near the airport in the past. Peters, the Sri Lankan, had a message for his countrymen who might consider pursuing work in Iraq. "There is little money here. The jobs do not come easily and people are being held against their wishes," he said.
A group of about 50 men living in tents about a mile away were even worse off than the men in the warehouses, and they appeared to be victims of human trafficking. They live in huts they built with tarps and pieces of carpet, and said they had no access to food or water.
The property is under the control of the Iraq Civil Aviation Administration, which couldn't be reached for comment Tuesday.
These men apparently didn't arrive in Iraq with contracts promising them work, but instead had relied on agents who were supposed to place them in jobs. The men in the tent camp, who're from the same countries as those in the warehouses, said they paid close to $5,000 to the agents.
"We came to make a good salary and go home, but we're not lucky," said Ganesh Kumar Bhagat, 22, a Nepalese man who sleeps with four others in a tent along the main airport road.
He hasn't told his family that his plans did not succeed in Iraq, instead assuring them that he lives and works safely on an American base.
Bhagat and others at the camp gave a McClatchy reporter phone numbers for the agents who led them to Iraq. Some numbers had been disconnected. In other cases, people quickly hung up.
Ashton reports for the Modesto (Calif.) Bee)
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3 Comments so far
Show Allwe have to be fair enough with all the paties,
I think there is somthing wrong with this report, as most of the pictures attached are not belong to Najlaa International Services, as I'm here in Iraq and I have not seen such things with Najlaa staff.
maybe the employees have hard situation, but they are not in this very bad level.
I wish that the person who did this report to go back and double check with the people and places of these pictures,,
and if he find out that he was mistaken, to make correction to this report.
regards,
Youssef
gnken
Mike - not to disagree with you, but I think you're being unfair to these workers. Have your ever been involed in work outside the U.S.? I have. In 1979-1982 I worked in Mexico with an American Company - family maritime business. Back then when our boats would arrive in Mexico to work under contract with Pemex, we had set up to hire local labor. Mexican labor was not very good, mainly because they weren't bi-lingual. We would hire Hondurans and most had background in working on boats. What I first experienced was groups of Hondurans who had traveled to the Yucatan to find work. There salaries were less then U.S. In Iraq it's a much larger scale of the same thing. Workers living in poverty and doing whatever to make a living and will aquire 5000 dollars to pay someone to get them a job. It's criminal but I would not blame the desperate worker trying to make a better life, as much as I think these contractors should be held to account.
As I said in commenting on the other article today at CD on this same story, these workers are damn wrong and dumb to have ever wanted to accept to try to work in this totally criminal war of aggression for the totally criminal aggressors, but should be paid for their time, since they left their countries for these jobs and not only over the past month, while their return flights home should be provided to them at no charge.
With that said, however, if they're dumped in the middle of a large ocean during the return flight home, then I won't shed a single tear. They chose to work for the criminal aggressors, and clearly don't care about Iraqis and their extreme plight, etcetera; therefore, them losing out is not important at all. I'd care more about real lemmings, the rodent ones.
I would care to see the criminals who'd harm these people on their return trips home, yes I would; just like I believe they should be paid for all of their time ever since they left home based on promises from subcontractors working with the U.S. occupation and KBR. But I wouldn't care about these damn lemming workers any more than for this one matter of principle. Anyone as dumb and selfish, without healthy morals, as these people are deserves to lose. Yes, sure, I agree that their greed is due to desperation, I suppose anyway, and this needs to be considered with care; but I couldn't care much about that issue. I'd only give a [little], very little, consideration to their economic desperation.
Otoh, I wonder how desperate they really were, given they paid thousands of dollars to get jobs when no one should pay to get jobs, ever! We're supposed to be paid for taking and performing jobs, but these workers were dumb enough to pay out thousands of dollars to try to get jobs that turned out to be ghost jobs! We pay to cover our traveling expenses to and from work, for lunch food, coffees, and some other incidentals; but when the traveling distance is more than around 50mi in the U.S., Ca, ..., then we get financial credits, and we never pay anyone to place us in jobs, except for the occasional and rare sucker!
Damn dumb these idiots were and are! They should be happy for simply not having been killed by Iraqi Resistance, so far!
LASTLY, CD should find articles or news of real value to post, instead of bs, junk, crap like this McClatchy piece and the other one by the Times, UK, are.