Indian Migrant Workers March Into the Line of Fire in Israel
要約
Date Reported: 2024年4月26日
場所: イスラエル
企業
National Skill Development Corporation - Recruiter関連
Total individuals affected: Number unknown
移住者・移民労働者: ( Number unknown - インド - Sector unknown , Gender not reported , Documented migrants )課題
Occupational Health & Safety回答
Response sought: Yes, by Resource Centre
Story containing response: (Find out more)
取られた措置: In May 2024, Business & Human Rights Resource Centre invited National Skill Development Corporation to respond to the article, including by outlining what heightened due diligence it is conducting to assess actual and potential human rights impacts of its recruitment of Indian workers to Israel. National Skill Development Corporation did not respond.
情報源のタイプ: News outlet
In the award-winning Sea of Poppies, Indian novelist Amitav Ghosh immortalised the journey of 19th century indentured labour migrants— called “girmitiyas“—aboard a ship to Mauritius during the heyday of British colonialism.
It’s 2024. Another group of migrant workers trudges through New Delhi international airport carrying cheap plastic suitcases, wearing clothing bought off roadside flea markets.
They are the new age “girmitiyas” in search of a promised El Dorado.
More than 60 Indian construction workers left for Israel in early April amid mounting concerns for their safety and rising opposition from trade unions in India, but to no avail…
When Israel’s war on Palestine erupted last October, Israel cancelled the permits of Palestinian workers, and sought to replace them with as many as 100,000 migrant workers from countries like India, continuing an agreement between the two governments.
While Israel’s recruitment of workers in a conflict zone is worrying, far worse is India’s willingness to send its workers into the line of fire…
The motivations of the Indian government — which actively facilitated the recruitment of Indian workers to Israel under its National Skill Development Corporation — come into question.
The answer can be found in India’s strained relationship with its migrant workers — both under British colonialism and after independence…