450 workers stranded in Bahrain as construction companies default on wages
Resumo
Data informada: 15 Jun 2018
Localização: Barein
Empresas
Al Qawareer Contracting Co. - Unknown , Faisal Fardan Electrical Construction - Unknown , International Trading Co. - Unknown , Orlando Construction Co. - UnknownOutros
Government ( Setor não informado/aplicável ) - UnknownAfetados
Total de pessoas afetadas: 450
Trabalhadores migrantes e imigrantes: ( Número desconhecido - Bangladesh , Construção Civil , Gender not reported ) , Trabalhadores migrantes e imigrantes: ( Número desconhecido - Índia , Construção Civil , Gender not reported )Temas
Direito à Alimentação , Failing to renew visas , Precarious/Unsuitable Living Conditions , Restricted mobility , Withholding Passports , Privação da liberdade de expressão , Wage Theft , Privação da liberdade de ir e virResposta
Resposta solicitada: Sim, por Resource Centre
História contendo resposta (Saiba mais)
Medidas tomadas: The workers held a protest march lasting several hours from their labour camp in Tubli to the Labour Court of Bahrain; they were stopped by police in Manama and returned to their labour camp.
Tipo de fonte: NGO
Around 450 workers from multiple construction companies in Bahrain have been denied their wages for over four months. All of the construction companies are owned by the same parent company which is managed and owned by an Indian national, and a Bahraini partner... Many of the 350 workers have been working for the companies for more than eight years. One worker told Migrant-Rights.org, “last year some workers had issues with the management due to unpaid salaries, not providing a ticket home, not giving passport or renewing the visa, but this year the company just stopped paying us all together”... More than 100 workers who reside in the company’s labour camp have either resigned because of unpaid wages or have been fired by the company, and many of them now live in Bahrain with irregular status because the company failed to renew their visas... Lack of food provision and safe and proper accommodation only adds more misery to their plight. In some cases, up to 12 people live in a single, overcrowded room... There is no running water in the showers or kitchen and the workers use water buckets to clean themselves... Above all, the safety standards in the camp are hazardous to workers’ health: there are no safety valves on the gas cylinders used for cooking, the fire extinguishers are obsolete, and many air-conditioners are in poor condition.